Mboro: I won’t help police hunt for Bushiri, I’m not a spy
There has been speculation that Mboro may have known about Bushiri's plans, with claims that he was the last person to have been contacted by the fugitive.
Pastor Mboro attending Bushiri’s bail hearing at the Pretoria Magistrates court, 4 November 2020, Pretoria. Picture: Jacques Nelles
Incredible Happenings church leader Mapaseka “Mboro” Motsoeneng says he will not help law enforcement officials hunt for fugitive Shepherd Bushiri and his wife Mary.
Mboro said the two had made an agreement to make peace before fleeing the country,.
“We made an agreement to make peace. We still need to meet but I don’t know in this condition. Things are a mess now,” he said.
The Bushiris fled the country last week due to “safety and security reasons”.
Read more: Shepherd Bushiri and wife flee to Malawi while out on bail
Since then, there has been speculation that Mboro may have known about the Bushiris’ plans, with claims that he was the last person to have been contacted by the fugitive.
But Mboro said it was not the case.
“Yes, he tried to reach me I think on Tuesday. I saw his missed call but didn’t respond to the call. I sent WhatsApp messages to say ‘I was busy during the day, can we talk?’
“The phone was off, so I could no longer see anything until I saw I saw in the media, I’m also shocked,” said Mboro on Monday.
Mboro said he was now leaving everything to law enforcement authorities, responding to calls for him to help locate Bushiri.
“I’m not going to help the police to hunt for Major 1, it’s not my job. Those who want to fight with Major 1, don’t involve me. We made peace, not because I fear these guys who are threatening me. I won’t fight with him anymore, unless he fights me directly.
“I’m not going to be used to hunt for Major 1. I’m not on the payroll of the police, I’m not the spy of the police, I’m not working with the police,” he said.
“Now my focus is to heal the sick, raise the dead, cast out demons and coronavirus – which I’m succeeding. My life is not about Bushiri, I’m not working closely with him. He has his ministry, I have my ministry; he has his spiritual connections, I have my spiritual connections. We’re not buddies.”
ALSO READ: Mboro says he’s trying to save Bushiri’s soul, after latter’s arrest
The two self-proclaimed prophets were involved in a bitter legal war after Bushiri filed an urgent application to interdict Motsoeneng from making what he described as “defamatory” statements about him.
Bushiri’s case against Motsoeneng came in response to “defamatory” statements published on social media and in the press about him.
The statements in question emanated from allegations that Bushiri duped some his congregants out of their life savings by getting them to invest in a dodgy forex and trading commodities scheme and, in particular, reports about 46-year-old Felicia Sibeko and her husband, Arthur, who claim they lost a total of R130,000.
READ MORE: ‘It’s unfair,’ says Bushiri after fraud, money laundering case postponed
Bushiri, too, claimed to have been a victim of the scheme. And he said in his court papers that once he realised it was not above aboard, he took from his own pocket to repay investors – including the Sibekos, whom he said he had paid back in two tranches of R65,000.
During arguments, advocate Dali Mpofu SC for Bushiri, said the offending statements painted him as “a fraudster, a thief, a liar”.
Additional reporting by Bernadette Wicks
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