Mountain of Fire and Miracles Ministries Church, popularly
called MFM, has denied that eight Nigerians arrested by
Cambodian authorities for alleged drug trafficking are its
members.
Eight Nigerians were on Tuesday arraigned in Cambodia
for allegedly using the MFM premises to deal in illicit
drugs.
The accused were: Nnamezie Victor, 30; Francis Nnamdi,
30; Sunday Nwabuisi, 31; Tony Mmaduka Chukwuonye, 34;
Okorom Kizito, 35; Favour Nnabuife Okorom, 36; Maduka
Simon Ukandu, 37; and Izuchukwu Chukwuma, 40.
Also charged along with them is a Cambodian, Mon
Vinyong, 25.
They may face life imprisonment if found guilty by the
Phnom Penh Municipal Court, in a case that began in
January last year.
A verdict is expected in September following a final trial
last week.
Reacting to the claim that the Cambodian branch of the
church was used to trade in drugs, Chairman of MFM
Media Committee Worldwide, Oladele Bank-Olemoh, told
SUNDAY PUNCH that the accused were not members of the
church.
He said linking the accused to the church was an attempt
to drag the name of the church through the mud.
“The MFM church is not shut down. Our pastor is there and
he’s busy in the ministry. Those arrested are not members
of the church. They are neither our missionaries nor
workers in the church. The MFM church is the only African
church in Cambodia that many black people attend.
“You know the country is a Muslim country. This could be a
vendetta against the church. This case (of alleged drug
trafficking) happened in 2014. The church was searched
and nothing was found, though arrests were made outside
the church. We employed a lawyer to prove the church’s
innocence,” Bank-Olemoh said.
According to The Cambodia Daily, during the hearing,
Vinyong claimed that she received mobile phone boxes
from Chukwuonye in 2014 but did not know the boxes
were filled with drugs.
The Cambodian publication noted that the eight Nigerians
“operated out of the Mountain of Fire and Miracles
Ministries Church in Meanchey district in 2014 and early
2015.”
The court heard that the pair became friends after meeting
at the church.
“At the end of October and early November, I delivered
the goods two or three times, and in December I delivered
them one more time,” she said, adding that she was paid
$100 per day for acting as a courier.
PUNCH:
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