Mboro says he’s trying to save Bushiri’s soul, after the latter’s arrest – The Citizen



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The shepherd wars continue, but at least one of the warring parties says that he is simply trying to save his rival’s soul and does not want to see him die.

Incredible events Mapaseka ‘Mboro’ Church leader Motsoeneng said he had to “do away with certain powers in the spirit” to create an atmosphere that would make it possible for the leader of the Church of the Enlightened Christian Encounter, Shepherd Bushiri and his wife Mary, were arrested.

Bushiri turned himself in to the Hawks after Mary was arrested Monday afternoon, church spokesman Ephraim Nyondo confirmed.

In a statement Tuesday, Nyondo said the Hawks’ attorneys had asked the couple to discuss an investment in connection with the Rising Estate, which is an international property development and investment company.

“The Hawks informed the attorneys for our leaders, the Prophet Shepherd Bushiri and the prophetess Mary Bushiri, on Monday afternoon that they are requesting the couple to come to their office at 11:00 am accompanied by their attorneys to discuss a subject related to an investment related to a company. called Rising Estate, ”he said.

Nyondo went on to say, “The Prophet and the lawyers were preparing for the 11 am appointment, when the Hawks went to their home before the appointment and arrested the Prophet’s wife alone.

“The Prophet heads to the Hawks office to turn himself in. He believes in the country’s justice system and will comply with everything the law requires until this entire war is over.

“As the matter is still under criminal investigation, we have been warned not to look into this matter further,” he said.

Bushiri has been trending on social media, along with Mboro, who was quick to celebrate Bushiri’s arrest, though she said she felt sorry for her children.

Furthermore, he warned the “false” prophets that their time had run out.

“Major 1 has been arrested. He was arrested today, his wife was arrested first. I feel sorry for your children. The father and mother are gone, ”Mboro said in a lengthy video shared on his Facebook page.

“ECG members approached me about the money they lost. Many pastors, fraternities and movements are afraid of Bushiri. Any pastor in South Africa who is stealing, raping and killing will never do that again. If they kill me for the truth, that’s fine, I died for God. It is time for you to know that God is in South Africa. “

Mboro further reminded South Africans of his “prophecy” last year that 2020 would be a difficult year, but also noted that Bushiri said it would nonetheless be a great year.

Read more: Mboro talks about celebrity deaths, SANDF helicopter crash, and disasters God ‘showed’ him

Also check out the Bushiri video below:

“God told me that 2020 will be the worst year and Bushiri said that it will be an open door year of whatever, it did not happen. They are still closed, they did not open.

“I just don’t want Bushiri to die. I want your soul to be saved. I will never curse him, I don’t believe in these dangerous sentences where you curse other people. I had to end certain powers in the spirit, ”Mboro said.

The two self-proclaimed prophets are embroiled in a bitter legal war after Bushiri submitted an urgent request to ban Motsoeneng from making what he described as “slanderous” statements about him.

The request was removed from the list and the court found that it was not in fact urgent.

Bushiri’s case against Motsoeneng came in response to “defamatory” statements posted on social media and in the press about him.

The statements in question emanated from allegations that Bushiri cheated some of his parishioners out of his life savings by making them invest in an unreliable Forex and commodity trading scheme and, in particular, reports on Felicia Sibeko, from 46 years old, and her husband, Arthur. , who claim to have lost a total of R130,000.

READ MORE: ‘It’s unfair,’ says Bushiri after fraud, money laundering case postponed

Bushiri also claimed to have been a victim of the scheme. And he said in his court papers that once he realized he was not up on board, he pulled out of his own pocket to pay investors, including the Sibekos, whom he said he had paid in two tranches of R65,000.

During the discussions, Bushiri’s defender Dali Mpofu SC said the offensive remarks described him as “a scammer, a thief, a liar.”

He said they also suggested that the Malawi-born Bushiri should “go home” and that they had a xenophobic background.

Additional reporting, Bernadette Wicks

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