logo
Pastor Timothy Omotoso to fight decision to have him declared a prohibited person

Pastor Timothy Omotoso to fight decision to have him declared a prohibited person

Daily Maverick11-05-2025

Controversial pastor Timothy Omotoso is likely to take Home Affairs Minister Leon Schreiber's decision to have him declared a prohibited person on review, a spokesperson for his supporters said on Sunday.
Omotoso was arrested at 5am on Saturday at the building on Commercial Street in East London where he had been leading a 'New Dawn' crusade since last Monday.
Obed Molemo, spokesperson for Christians of South Africa, which has been supporting Omotoso since his release from prison on 2 April, said they do not believe his arrest was for immigration reasons but to silence his 'prophetic voice'.
'This arrest is not about documentation. It is about silencing a prophetic voice. Rev Omotoso is being targeted not for what he has done, but for what he represents – a rising tide of spiritual authority that threatens the status quo. Like Robert Sobukwe before him, Rev Omotoso is being punished for his thoughts, his faith and the anointing he carries. This is detention by design, intended to humiliate and suppress,' Christians of South Africa said.
Molemo confirmed on Sunday that counsel has been appointed for Omotoso.
'The State did bring the immigration issue to the spotlight, right in the infancy of the trial. It was challenged and [Omotoso] won. As it was legally challenged then, so shall it be challenged even now,' Molemo added.
Omotoso was previously declared a prohibited person but in 2024 Acting Judge Donovan Pitt set this decision aside and remitted the decision to the department for a new decision.
On Saturday the Department of Home Affairs said Schreiber had rejected Omotoso's latest application to have this decision overturned.
Omotoso spent seven years in St Albans Prison in Nelson Mandela Bay awaiting trial on human trafficking and sexual assault charges.
The court heard allegations that he sexually assaulted several young women who were part of the Jesus Dominion International Church, praying with them afterwards to ask for forgiveness. Omotoso was released from prison on 2 April after he was acquitted on all charges. Judge Irma Schoeman found that the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) had botched the prosecution.
The NPA is still investigating whether there are grounds to appeal the ruling and recently added another senior counsel to the team reviewing the case.
Omotoso was declared a prohibited person by Home Affairs while in prison but went to court citing that the department was biased and working with the NPA.
Despite the court order instructing Home Affairs to review its decision, Omotoso was released from prison. Home Affairs officials were originally sent to arrest him at the court but they arrived too late and he had already left. The court adjourned at 11am and they only arrived at 1pm.
Omotoso, however, was not in hiding and openly set up the 'New Dawn' Crusade at the Jesus Dominion International Church in East London, where he has been preaching since 4 May. His supporters said that shortly after his release he visited the Nigerian consulate and confirmed that his paperwork was in order.
Buffalo City mayor Princess Faku stopped the municipality from renting out the Orient Theatre to him, but the church found a private venue. Pictures emerged on social media last week showing hundreds of people attending the crusade led by Omotoso.
On Saturday, National Police Commissioner Fannie Masemola confirmed that members of Home Affairs' Immigration Inspectorate and the police – including the highly trained National Intervention Unit and the Tactical Response Team – arrested Omotoso at 5am 'just after church'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ActionSA demands parliamentary inquiry into NPA, calls for Batohi's removal
ActionSA demands parliamentary inquiry into NPA, calls for Batohi's removal

IOL News

time10 hours ago

  • IOL News

ActionSA demands parliamentary inquiry into NPA, calls for Batohi's removal

ActionSA has become the latest political party to call for the removal of National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP) Shamila Batohi, citing ongoing failures within the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) and alleged political interference in its operations. The party is demanding a full parliamentary inquiry into the institution's leadership, accountability, and effectiveness. At a press briefing on Saturday, ActionSA leaders expressed deep concern over what they described as a "crisis of credibility" facing the NPA. According to the party, public trust in the prosecuting authority has deteriorated sharply, particularly in the wake of persistent delays in high-profile prosecutions, limited progress in tackling corruption, and the continued perception of political shielding for powerful individuals. 'South Africans are losing faith in the very institution meant to uphold justice and the rule of law,' said ActionSA national chairperson Michael Beaumont. 'We need to know the full extent to which political interference has infected the operations of the NPA. We believe this requires a transparent and independent parliamentary investigation. 'The party's demand follows similar concerns raised in recent months by civil society organisations, legal experts, and opposition parties over the NPA's perceived inaction on key corruption cases, many of them stemming from the revelations of the Zondo Commission of Inquiry into State Capture.

Life imprisonment for rapist of elderly woman
Life imprisonment for rapist of elderly woman

The Citizen

time16 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Life imprisonment for rapist of elderly woman

THE Scottburgh Regional Court has sentenced a 38-year-old man to life imprisonment after he pleaded guilty to the rape of a 64-year-old woman. The rape occurred in 2023 in the KwaCele area. According to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), in the early hours of 18 January 2023, the complainant was asleep in her bed when she felt someone's presence in her room, and she awoke. NPA regional spokesperson Natasha Ramkisson-Kara said the accused grabbed her and used his hand to cover her mouth to prevent her from screaming. ALSO READ: KZN marks International Children's Day with calls to end violence against children 'He told her he would do as he pleased, and thereafter, he would give her R200. He overpowered the complainant and raped her. Her screams alerted her daughter to the offence, and she came to her mother's rescue,' said Ramkisson-Kara. Ramkisson-Kara further revealed that the accused then climbed through the bedroom window and fled the scene. 'He was arrested shortly after, at his place of residence, after being pointed out by the complainant and her daughter. 'In aggravation of the sentence, Prosecutor Thanusha Govender told the court that the circumstances of the offence were inhumane. The complainant had a right to feel safe in the sanctity of her own home, however, the accused invaded her privacy. ALSO READ: No explosion, says Tronox after loud bang prompts evacuation 'Govender also handed in the J88 form, as well as a DNA analysis report. The accused was convicted accordingly, and he was declared unfit to possess a firearm,' added Ramkisson-Kara. Ramkisson-Kara said the NPA welcomes the life sentence handed down. 'Elderly persons are protected by legislation due to their vulnerability as they age, and ought to be able to live in a peaceful and safe environment. Cases such as this underscore the NPA's commitment to ensuring justice is served, particularly in cases involving crimes against the most vulnerable members of our society, our elderly,' she said. Don't have the ZO app? Download it to your Android or Apple device here: HAVE YOUR SAY Like our Facebook page and follow us on Twitter. For news straight to your phone invite us: WhatsApp – 060 784 2695 Instagram – zululand_observer At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Shamila Batohi 'in hot water' over infiltration claims at NPA
Shamila Batohi 'in hot water' over infiltration claims at NPA

The South African

time20 hours ago

  • The South African

Shamila Batohi 'in hot water' over infiltration claims at NPA

ActionSA has called for the immediate removal of National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) boss Shamila Batohi over 'prosecutorial failures'. The call comes as Batohi, the outgoing National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP), admitted this week that there is political interference in the work of the NPA and that it has been infiltrated. Apart from that, the NPA has been in the spotlight for prosecutorial failures in major cases, especially the acquittal of Nigerian televangelist Timothy Omotoso and the extradition of former Free State Premier Ace Magashule's assistant Moroadi Cholota. In an interview with Newzroom Afrika , Batohi said the NPA has been infiltrated and captured by people who do not have the rule of law at heart. Batohi said they are having internal challenges; some prosecutors may not be aligned with the vision of really fighting for the rule of law in this country. However, she refused to divulge who had captured the institution, how it was captured, and the extent of the interference. Regarding failure to extradite the Gupta brothers, fugitive pastor Shepherd Bushiri, and possibly Timothy Omotoso, Shamila Batohi said none of the extradition challenges in these cases are because of the NPA. ActionSA has since demanded a full parliamentary inquiry into the NPA's ongoing prosecutorial failures and the extent to which political interference has affected its operations. The party said the NPA has once again exposed its deep dysfunction, either through incompetence or wilful neglect, with the latest disgrace being the collapse of the asbestos corruption case involving former Free State Premier, Ace Magashule, due to the unlawful and irregular handling of the extradition of his former personal assistant, Moroadi Cholota. 'This is not an isolated blunder, but part of a disturbing and entrenched pattern. The NPA has become a refuge for the politically connected, a place where accountability is avoided, justice is delayed, and prosecutions collapse with shocking regularity,' ActionSA leader in Parliament, Atholl Trollip, said. 'Under Shamila Batohi's leadership, the NPA reels from one scandal to the next. South Africans are left wondering if these failures are merely a result of incompetence or if there is a deliberate agenda to protect the corrupt. Let us be clear that this is not just about one failed case. 'The pattern is undeniable. From the Phala Phala saga to the collapse of high-profile cases like Timothy Omotoso, Shepherd Bushiri, and the Estina Dairy Project, the list of prosecutorial disasters grows longer by the day. Most damning is the NPA's failure to secure the extradition of the Gupta brothers, nearly a decade after the Gupta Leaks shook the nation,' Trollip added. Following Batohi's interviews, the EFF said it has written to the Speaker of the National Assembly, Thoko Didiza, demanding a debate on Batohi's claims. The party said the crisis at the NPA is not only one of infiltration, it is one of denial, incompetence and weak leadership. 'No transformation of the criminal justice system will be possible if its leadership refuses to acknowledge its own failures while hiding behind platitudes of institutional rebuilding. 'It is clear that Batohi has never had a coherent plan, no control over her institution, and no political will to confront the forces undermining the rule of law in South Africa. Her tenure has been marked by delays, deflections, deterioration, and disappointment,' the EFF said. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1. Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X, and Bluesky for the latest news.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store