Controversial Nigerian Televangelist |
Klaasen told the court
that government printers indicated to him that the pastor’s temporary residence
permit was dispatched in Port Elizabeth. He said on May 20, 2000, a request for
eight permits were made including a temporary residence permit all of which
he said were issued the same day. He said a permit issued
by a former home affairs official in Port Elizabeth, was fraudulent, making the
televangelist eligible for deportation. “When a person is
issued with a fraudulent permit that person becomes illegal and all permits
issued thereafter become null and void,” said Klaasen.
The prosecution wanted
to know if the Department of Home Affairs were able to identify officers who
issued the permits fraudulently.
“One officer in Port
Elizabeth has been identified, others seem not to work for the department
anymore,” said Klaasen.
Defence advocate
Alfonso Hattingh, told the court that the pastor had “lost” one of his
passports, adding that the televangelist did nothing wrong in the way in which
he went about obtaining legality in South Africa.
Social Development MEC
Nancy Sihlwayi attended court proceedings on Friday, with members of the African
National Congress Women’s League.
Speaking to the media
outside court, Sihlwayi said that she was there to support the victims. “This process is
showing us about an apartheid that is coming back to this country, where our
people are undermined and humiliated by some of those who are perceived as
church people. As government we are tasked by the premier of the Eastern Cape
to give support to the victims while we are clear that the process of justice
should take its course,” she said.
The pastor, who is based
in Durban, is alleged to have trafficked more than 30 girls and women who were
from various branches of his church countrywide. He allegedly took the girls to
a house in Umhlanga, in KwaZulu Natal, where he sexually exploited them.
According to the testimony
before court, senior members of the church would recruit “vulnerable” girls
between 13 and 15 and lure them into performing sexual acts with the pastor.
Following a foiled attempt to effect an arrest in Bloemfontein over the Easter
weekend, the televangelist was arrested by the Hawks on April 20, at the Port
Elizabeth airport and has been in custody ever since. By way of affidavit,
the pastor has denied allegations engaging in sexual activities with the said girls.
The 58-year-old father
is facing 22 counts of human trafficking and sexual assault.