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Churches
raided in Zimbabwe for opposing disgraced bishop
Ruth Gledhill, The Times (UK)
January 14, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article3186802.ece
The Archbishop of Canterbury,
Dr Rowan Williams, issued an unprecedented condemnation of a former
Anglican bishop today after police in Zimbabwe used force to intervene
and stop official Anglican church services from going ahead. Dr
Williams said he was "appalled" by reports of Zimbabwe
police forcibly stopping Anglican church services where clergy had
publicly refused to acknowledge the authority of the deposed Nolbert
Kunonga. At least three priests and several parishioners opposed
to Kunonga were dragged out of church and arrested after truncheon-wielding
police in roit gear disrupted Anglican services in Harare on Sunday.
Their "crime" was to hold services without the authorisation
of Zimbabwe's police or government.
Kunonga, a close ally
of Zimbabwe president Robert Mugabe and a supporter of the ruling
Zanu PF party, has had his Anglican priestly licence removed and
was replaced as Bishop of Harare last December after he illegally
separated from the Province of Central Africa. He has subsequently
announced the setting up of a new, independent Anglican Church of
Zimbabwe of which he has declared himself the Archbishop. After
Bishop Sebastian Bakare has been appointed acting Bishop of Harare,
police sent round leaflets advising congregations that only clergy
loyal to Kunonga were authorised to hold services. The conflict,
essentially a political one, has become muddied by Kunonga's attempt
to represent the dispute as a further escalation in the row over
homosexuality that is splitting the Anglican Communion. He has attempted
to claim he is on the side of Biblical orthodoxy.
In fact, the Province
of Central Africa is among the most conservative of all 38 Anglican
provinces. Dr Williams, who did not invite Kunonga to this year's
Lambeth Conference, said he stood "in solidarity" with
the province, which covers Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia and Botswana.
He said Kunonga's position has become "increasingly untenable"
within the Anglican Church over the last year, as he has consistently
refused to maintain appropriate levels of independence from the
Zimbabwean Government. Canon Kenneth Kearon, Secretary General of
the Anglican Communion, also condemned Kunonga and the actions of
the Zimbabwe authorities. He said: "The situation with respect
to the Anglican Church in Harare is a matter of grave concern to
all in the Anglican Communion. Bishop Kunonga's close ties with
President Robert Mugabe are of deep concern to many and the resort
to violent disruption has been widely deplored.
"His unilateral
actions with respect to the Diocese of Harare and his own status
within the Province of Central Africa are, to say the least, questionable
and have brought embarrassment to many. Above all, I am concerned
for the well-being of faithful Anglicans who seek to practice their
faith in peace and free from violence." Churches disrupted
included St Elizabeth church in Belvedere, St James's Church Warren
Park and the church in Marlborough, all suburbs of Harare. Bishop
Bakare, who was preaching at St Luke's in Greendale suburb, was
permitted by police to hold a service in the church hall while Kunonga
preached inside the church. A spokesman, Christopher Tapera, said
the hall was packed, while three people were in the church with
Kunonga.
Kunonga announced on
Saturday that he was creating a new province. "History has
been made today," the state-controlled Sunday Mail quoted him
as saying. "We have formed our own province. It has been painful
and sorrowful but out of that came the joy of our own province,"
he said. According to reports from the region, Kunonga's actions
while Bishop of Harare included expelling several priests and ordaining
government ministers in their place. For this he was rewarded with
a farm, from which he promptly expelled the 41 black families living
there. In 2006, Kunonga faced a number of serious charges, including
inciting members of the Central Intelligence Organization and war
veterans to kill 10 prominent Anglicans including priests and churchwardens.
He was cleared of all charges by the Archbishop of Central Africa,
Bernard Malango, who retired at the end of December.
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