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Ugandan Pastor Stoned to Death

by Simon Peter Apiku

   WEST NILE DISTRICT, ADJUMANI, UGANDA --

   Police in Uganda's West Nile region said this week that they were
   holding three South Sudanese in connection with last week's brutal
   killing of a Ugandan preacher at the Pagirinya refugee settlement in
   Adjumani district.

   Superintendent Josephine Angucia, a spokeswoman for the West Nile
   regional police, said Pastor Bunia Margaret of the Victory Church,
   which operates in Uganda's Adjumani and Moyo districts, was killed in
   broad daylight by a mob at the Pagirinya II trading center after a
   group of Christian evangelical leaders had accused her of being a
   witch.

   "This deceased pastor, Margaret, went to preach the word of God at the
   refugee camps of Adjumani district. She got a big congregation.
   According to witnesses, this did not go well with other pastors at the
   refugee camps. Out of jealousness, they mobilized and came up with a
   memorandum labeling Bunia Margaret to be a witch," Angucia told VOA's
   South Sudan in Focus.

   South Sudanese refugee leaders at the settlement said Margaret arrived
   in May and established her church in Pagirinya II's Block E.

   John Wani, who lives in Pagirinya Block E, said Margaret attracted
   mostly women and children. He said the pastor claimed she had the power
   to heal any disease. This, he said, encouraged some to abandon their
   homes and camp at the church, often for several days. As a result, Wani
   said, some women abandoned their responsibilities at home.

   Wani also said strange things also happened to members of Margaret's
   Victory Church.

   "Many children also left the school because of that. Some girls could
   go there to pray all night, and they never respected their parents.
   That pastor, she also told a young boy who was suffering from hepatitis
   that he should not take the medicine. Pastor said God would cure him,"
   Wani told South Sudan in Focus.

   Strong denials

   Margaret's followers, including South Sudanese refugee Grace Kuku,
   strongly denied the allegations, saying she'd healed many people with
   diseases in the camp. They also argued that freedom of worship is a
   fundamental right under Ugandan law, and said that if parents were not
   happy with the pastor's teachings and activities, they should have
   prevented their children from attending her church.

   "I have not witnessed these things. What I know is that there was a
   girl brought from Agojo who was having this mental illness. Pastor
   started to fast and pray for her, something like five days. Like that,
   the girl was OK," Kuku said.

   But religious and community leaders in the camp continued to call for
   Margaret's expulsion. Officials said they were still reviewing the
   demand when a youth mob stoned Margaret, who died August 7. Angucia
   said the three South Sudanese suspects were pastors and that police
   believe the suspects encouraged the youths to kill Margaret.

   "Inquiries still continue, and police deployments are yet continuing
   there as I speak. The situation has remained calm as we monitor and
   look for the other suspects who are still at large," Angucia told VOA.

   Angucia warned refugees there would be serious repercussions for people
   who acted as judge and jury.

   "So, as police, we highly condemn this act of mob justice, where
   individuals take [the] law into their hands and act on people based on
   rumors, which are not properly investigated. So, whoever participated
   in this should know that at the rightful time, he or she will be
   arrested and prosecuted before the law, because this is not accepted by
   the law of Uganda," said Angucia.

   The police superintendent said the three suspects appeared in court
   last Friday and were charged with murder. If found guilty, they could
   face the death penalty.