Campaigners are urging for Helen Ukpabio, known as 'Lady Apostle', to be
deported and banned from returning to the UK on the grounds her
preaches are harmful to the public
A Nigerian ‘witch-hunter’ who
claims any child who cries is a ‘servant of Satan’ could be banned from
the UK following calls to British Home Secretary Theresa May that she is
a risk to youngsters.
Campaigners are urging for Helen
Ukpabio, known as ‘Lady Apostle’, to be deported and banned from
returning to the UK on the grounds her preaches are harmful to the
public. The born-again Christian Pentecostal preacher, who founded the
controversial African Evangelical franchise Liberty Foundation Gospel
Ministries in Nigeria, is thought to currently be in the UK.
It
understood she flew into London where she has been holding a number of
church services to promote her belief in witchcraft and offer help to
those ‘under threat’ from the wizardry.
Ms Ukpabio was one of a number of preachers who regularly travelled to the UK
A
poster advertising one of Ms Ukpabio’s most recent talks – which was
cancelled after the venue was leaked online – claims to offer help to
people who are under ‘witchcraft attack, ancestral spirit attack or
mermaid spirit attack’ and claims to help ‘disconnect' them. However,
campaigners have warned her controversial views are dangerous to
children – including the belief that ‘if a child under the age of two
screams in the night, cries and is always feverish with deteriorating
health, he or she is a servant of Satan’.
The Witchcraft and
Human Rights Information Network (WHRIN), the Bar Human Rights Committee
of England and Wales and the International Humanist and Ethical Union
(IHEU) have now written to the Home Secretary in an attempt to get Ms
Ukpabio deported under the Immigration Act 1971 - on the grounds her
presence in the UK is not conducive to the public good.
Campaigners
have written to Home Secretary Theresa May in an attempt to get the
preacher deported under the Immigration Act 1971 - on the grounds her
presence in the UK is not conducive to the public good
In a letter to
Ms May, the campaigners warn: ‘Whilst the Government has moved swiftly
to block entry to the UK for Islamic preachers whose presence is
considered as harmful to the public good, there have been no cases of
Christian pastors facing such measures.’
The groups are
hoping the pastor will be banned from returning to the UK once she has
completed her final tour. Gary Foxcroft, of the WHRIN said Ms Ukpabio
was one of a number of preachers who regularly travelled to the UK.
He
told the Independent: ‘The fundamental problem is that churches need to
be regulated. Anyone can set up a church tomorrow in their own garden
shed with no commitment to child protection or making their accounts
transparent or any theological training.’
Bob Churchill, of
the IHEU, also told the newspaper: ‘It is important that the UK
authorities send a message to the world that branding children, or
anyone, as a witch is beyond the pale.’
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