A desperate Bulawayo woman,
Catherine Ndlovu, who allegedly paid thousands of dollars to visit Nigeria,
seeking divine intervention for her hospitalized daughter has been reported as
one of the 115 people confirmed to have died after the collapse of a
church building owned by the pastor, TB Joshua.
Yesterday, the family of
Ndlovu, 40, accused TB Joshua and his church of giving very little information
concerning their sister in the aftermath of the September 12 disaster,
including insisting that the mother of two was unharmed and would be returning
home alive.
South African Chronicle quoted
Ndlovu’s brother Jabulani as saying that, “we called them (TB Joshua church)
every day, asking where my sister was and they said she had boarded a plane
back to South Africa and would be back last Sunday.
Lying
“We became suspicious when other
Zimbabweans who had travelled to Nigeria came back via South Africa and she was
not part of the group. It became clear they’d been lying to us and withholding
information from us all along.”
Ndlovu became the second Zimbabwean
to have allegedly died in the disaster after Greenwich Ndanga, the MDC-T
chairman for Mashonaland West, was reported to be among the dead by his family.
At least 84 South Africans were
allegedly killed and dozens trapped when the multi-storey guesthouse attached
to TB Joshua’s Synagogue Church of All Nations caved in.
However, Joshua claimed it was a
conspiracy, insisting that a mysterious plane flew, four times, too close to
the structure causing the collapse.
TB Joshua, who inspired an almost
fanatical devotion from his thousands of followers around the world, who were
drawn to his services by claims of miracles and prophecies, had offered to hold
services in South Africa once every month, claiming that six out of every 10
visitors to Nigeria from Southern Africa were coming to his church.
But the youth wing of South Africa’s
ruling African National Congress, yesterday, demanded that he be denied a visa.
“TB Joshua should not be allowed to
come to South Africa until we know what happened to our fellow countrymen at
his church,” ANC Youth League spokesperson Bandile Masuku said in a statement.
“We will engage with the department
of international relations and co-operation to make sure they do not issue him
with a South African visa.”
Ndlovu’s family said she left
Zimbabwe on September 11, a day after her 19 year-old daughter, Prioress
Tshuma, who had suffered from seizures since 2007, was admitted at Mpilo
Central Hospital. She believed the seizures were caused by an evil spirit, and
hoped TB Joshua would heal her.
It would have been just hours after
she touched down in the Nigerian capital, Lagos, before her life was snuffed
out by falling concrete blocks and cement dust – leaving a daughter in hospital
and a nine-year-old son, Progress Sibanda, orphaned.
Their uncle, Jabulani, was
battling with a lot of questions and accused the church of attempting a clumsy
cover-up.
“When we heard news of the collapse,
we feared the worst. There was no communication from the church until my
cousin, who lives in South Africa, called them.
“They just put up a wall of lies and
kept telling us she was safe. It would be only several days later that they
confirmed our worst fears,” he said.
But the family’s hope of getting
Catherine’s body any time soon were immediately dashed after TB Joshua’s aides
asked them to provide a DNA sample for positive identification.
“We don’t even know if that’s true,
and our only hope now is that our government can get to the bottom of this. Who
knows how many other Zimbabweans have been kept in the dark about their
relatives’ fate?”
TB Joshua had been heavily
criticized over his handling of the crisis, with aide workers saying they were
prevented from accessing the disaster area for several days.
The preacher, however, rejected the
lack of co-operation claims as inaccurate.
Instead, he said that “contrary to
this, we want to categorically state that the church has provided assistance
when and where required and continues to do so: good Christians are good
citizens,” he added.
TB Joshua Lied To Us, Family Of Deceased Zimbabwean Woman Claims
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Friday, September 26, 2014
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