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General News of Thursday, 21 May 2020

Source: www.mynigeria.com

Leo Igwe mocks Apostle Suleman as Cameroonian prophet dies of coronavirus

Apostle Suleman Apostle Suleman

Leo Igwe, a co-head of the Advocacy for Alleged Witches (AFAW), has used the death of a Cameroonian Prophet, Frankline Ndifor, to mock Apostle Suleman of Omega Fire Ministries.

Ndifor died after praying for coronavirus patients at his Kingship International Ministries Church. This was after he claimed that he was able to cure coronavirus.

MyNigeria.com recalls that Apostle Suleman, a few weeks ago, requested permission from the Nigerian Government to go heal coronavirus patients in isolation.

“Please (referring to the government) permit us to go and pray for COVID-19 patients. Allow us to go there (isolation centres), that is why there are men of God,” he said.

Just days after the death of the Cameroonian prophet, Leo Igwe stated that Apostle Suleman's request contravenes coronavirus guidelines.

A statement reads: “He was laying hands on those with confirmed cases of COVID-19. A pastor has also died in Port Harcourt in a similar circumstance. There may have been some other unreported cases of faith healing pastors who have died after laying hands on COVID-19 patients. This is a sad development. Some weeks ago, I urged the Nigerian authorities to sanction a pastor, Apostle Suleman, for claiming that he could heal a COVID-19 patient. He asked the government to allow him into the isolation centers so that he could heal those with confirmed cases of this disease.

“At a time that the health authorities were grappling to understand and contain the spread of the infection, and the WHO had issued guidelines that included not touching an infected person, I made it clear that Apostle Suleman’s claim was reckless and irresponsible. I added that prayer or laying hands on persons with the disease was not among the guidelines that WHO approved for the management of the virus. In fact, laying hands on sufferers violates the guidelines.

“Apostle Suleman did not take it kindly. He took to his Twitter to denounce me for saying that prayers could not heal COVID-19 patients. He declared that I was spewing “nonsense”. He added that “God is bigger than COVID-19”. This statement reminded me of another incident. I quickly recalled that an American pastor who made such a statement died shortly after saying this. It occurred to me that a pastor had died and another pastor wanted to die. Will I standby and allow it?

“To further dissuade him and other pastors who might want to embark on this high-risk prayer activity, I challenged Apostle Suleman to heal a COVID-19 patient and get a thousand dollars. I stated that the healing would take place under agreed medical and scientific conditions. In response, Suleman promised to send me details of those that he had healed (He never did). He went further to attack me for being ‘broke and poor’.

“Suleman sent his church members after me and they were abusing and attacking me. One of them phoned and as soon as I picked the phone she said, “You need Jesus. You need Jesus”. And she cut off the phone. Others sent me threatening messages on Twitter and Facebook. Some of the members sent messages via Facebook asking if I was ready to sleep without waking up and if I was no longer interested in being alive. I came under pressure from family members who felt that I was putting them at risk.

“Some relatives were concerned that they could be attacked by the goons of Apostle Suleman. Some friends called and emailed asking why I offered a rich pastor like Suleman, a thousand dollars, to heal a patient. I later increased the amount to five thousand dollars. A few called to inform me that I should have kept quiet, that I should refrain from criticizing other people’s beliefs. I was so disappointed that many people including Apostle Suleman missed the point.

“I did not want Suleman to suffer the same fate as this Cameroonian pastor. I did not want him to inspire other pastors to go that route. By the time I was having exchanges with Suleman, an American pastor who said that God was bigger than COVID-19 had died. I did not want another pastor, and more pastors to die. I did not want this virus of evangelical recklessness to spread and complicate efforts to contain the pandemic. In the desperate quest to grow their churches and accumulate wealth, clerics make irresponsible healing claims that too often endanger their lives and the health of others.

“Those who understand how potentially harmful these declarations are should endeavor to call out these men and women of God. They should challenge them to demonstrate the potency, safety, and efficacy of their claims. Faith healing should not be taken for granted any more especially as the world is battling with a vicious pandemic. Faith healing claims have serious repercussions on public health.

“We should not keep quiet and allow these charlatans to misinform and mislead the society, and promote habits and sentiments that accelerate the spread of diseases. We should not allow clerical con artists to continue to mine popular desperation and gullibility. Faith healing beliefs and activities of pastors have been linked to COVID-19 related deaths and spread. In the case of Prophet Ndifor, a faith healing pastor has died. Another faith healing pastor has died in Nigeria. And in the case of Apostle Suleman, another faith healing pastor wants to die.”