The United Kingdom’s Charity Commission is investigating the U.K. branch of David Oyedepo’s Winner Chapel
over the alleged misappropriation of at least £16 million (N4 billion)
collected as tithes between 2008 and 2011, the U.K. Guardian is
reporting.
Over N250 million (£1 million) of that amount is said
to have been repatriated to the Nigeria headquarters of the church
between 2009 and 2011, the church’s account shows.
A spokesperson
of the charity commission told the Guardian newspapers that
investigations “regarding the charity’s management and policies” are
on-going.
“We have considered documents and information shared by the trustees and our case is continuing,” she said.
The
congregants of the U.K. branch of the church are allegedly given credit
cards forms to make donations as they arrive for service. The forms are
inscribed with a verse from the Bible’s Book of Corinthians which
reads, “God loveth a cheerful giver.”
Documents submitted to the
Charity Commission show the parent organisation of the church, £8
million rich World Mission Agency, makes paltry donations to charity
causes. Its books shows it donated N2.6 million (£10,500) to Great
Ormond Street Children’s hospital and N2.2 million (£9,000) to Christian
Aid for the Haiti earthquake appeal and N625, 000 (£2,500) to charities
in the Lewisham area of London.
In contrast, it transferred N81.2
million (£324,683) and N165.8 million (£663,532) to world headquarters
in Nigeria in 2010 and 2011 respectively. In 2009 and 2010 N48, 000,000
was set aside for “welfare assistance” for unnamed “certain member of
the church.”
The Church also claimed it spent N37.25million “for charitable activities in Africa.”
David
Oyedepo, who is believed to be the richest pastor in Nigeria, lives a
life of opulence. He, through his church, owns at least three private
jets and one of the most expensive private universities in the country.
The Nigerian headquarters of the church prides itself as having the
biggest church auditorium in the world. The auditorium sits over 50,000
congregants.
“All of us have a growing concern about any kind of
mercenary response that puts cash at the centre of Christian faith. I
challenge any movement, including Winners, to be open and account for
its money wherever it goes because it comes originally from hard-working
faithful people,” said Joel Edwards, a senior figure in the British
evangelical movement and director of the Micah Challenge which is
running Exposed, a global anti-corruption campaign directed at churches,
business and government.
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