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Church
leaders bribed to back State - Ncube
Foster
Dongozi, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
June 04, 2006
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=11&id=988
A FIERCE critic of
the government, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Bulawayo, Pius Ncube, has
alleged that church leaders have been given farms and monetary gifts to
campaign for the government.
Archbishop Ncube made the startling allegations to The Standard a week
after leaders of Zimbabwe Council of Churches were hosted by President
Robert Mugabe at State House where they threw their support behind the
government.
Densen Mafinyane, the secretary-general of the ZCC said during the meeting
with President Mugabe: "We love Zimbabwe and support your (government)
efforts."
ZCC president Bishop Peter Nemapare, not to be outdone, sang praises of
the government. "We know we have a government that we must support,
interact with and draw attention (to concerns)," he said.
"Those of us who have different ideas about this country surely must
know we have a government which listens."
The ZCC leadership, in a brazen show of bias towards Zanu PF, reversed
a negative report on last year’s Parliamentary elections and forced its
partners to declare the elections free and fair, according to senior members.
ZCC was one of the accredited election observers.
Ncube said: "Some of our church leaders have been given farms and
money by the ruling party and government to campaign for them. The reason
why you see some church leaders singing government’s praises is because
they have already been bought. When somebody gives you money, you cannot
start pointing out their shortcomings."
While Nemapare was not immediately available for comment, Mafinyane said
he had neither received a farm nor gifts from the State.
But Ncube said the ZCC leadership should spend more time ministering to
suffering Zimbabweans instead of feasting with politicians. "Pastors
should have compassion and feeling for the ordinary people instead of
standing by the ruling class and the rich."
Ncube alleged the Central Intelligence Organisation had infiltrated churches
in a bid to monitor sermons. "The evil infiltration has become even
more sustained now with the government creating its own Zanu PF pastors
to divide the church," he said.
Ncube also urged Mugabe to resign, adding he had dismally failed to lead
the country.
"I know that even the Pope has sent Mugabe messages urging him to
resolve the problems in Zimbabwe. The problem with that man is that he
does not listen to advice. He listens to himself and his sentiments of
dictatorship."
The outspoken cleric said he did not hate Mugabe as claimed by the President.
Ncube had no kind words for Nemapare and Mafinyane either. "As for
Nemapare, I am not really surprised by his statements. He supports Mugabe;
he is a Zanu PF loyalist. Mafinyane always changes his stance; today he
will have a certain opinion, tomorrow that opinion will have changed."
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