Nigeria’s ‘Mega Churches’: A Hidden Pillar of Africa’s Top Economy

The collapse of the guest house of The Synagogue, Church of All Nations (SCOAN) last month, in which 115 persons were killed probably drew attention to the books and operations of many of the modern churches in Nigeria. Given the size and spread of many of the churches, they have come to be referred to as “mega churches” as some of them are indeed big enough to sit as many as 200,000 worshippers under one roof.

Yet, the multimillion-dollar “mega churches” form a huge, untaxed sector of Nigeria, which is Africa’s top economy.

According to Reuters’ findings, hundreds of millions of dollars change hands each year in these popular Pentecostal houses of worship.

Some of the churches can hold more than 200,000 worshippers and, with their attendant business empires, they constitute a significant section of the economy, employing tens of thousands of people and raking in tourists’ dollars, as well as exporting Christianity globally.

But exactly how much of Nigeria’s $510 billion GDP they make up is difficult to assess, since the churches are, like the oil sector in Africa’s top energy producer, largely opaque entities.

“They don’t submit accounts to anybody,” says Bismarck Rewane, economist and CEO of Lagos consultancy Financial Derivatives. “At least six church leaders have private jets, so they have money. How much? No one really knows.”

When Nigeria recalculated its GDP in March, its economy became Africa’s biggest, as previously poorly captured sectors such as mobile phones, e-commerce and its prolific “Nollywood” entertainment industry were specifically included in estimates.

There was no such separate listing for the “mega churches”, whose main source of income is “tithe”, the 10 per cent or so of their income that followers contribute, as a matter of scriptural obligation.

As the churches have charity status, they have no obligation to open their books, and certainly don’t have to fill in tax returns — an exemption that is increasingly controversial in Nigeria, where poverty remains pervasive despite the oil riches.

The pastors argue that their charity work should exempt them from taxation.

“We use the income of the church to build schools, we use the income of the church to serve the needs of the poor,” David Oyedepo, bishop of the popular Winners Chapel, told Reuters in an interview. “These are non-profit organisations.”

Nonetheless, the surging popularity of the mega churches among the Christians who make up half of Nigeria’s 170 million population has propelled their preachers into the ranks of the richest people in Africa.

In 2011, Forbes magazine estimated the fortunes of Nigeria’s five richest pastors. Oyedepo topped the list, with an estimated net worth of $150 million.

He was followed by Pastor Chris Oyakhilome of Believers’ Love World Incorporated, also known as the Christ Embassy and popular with executives and politicians, on $30 million to $50 million.

T.B Joshua, pastor of the Synagogue Church of All Nations, at the centre of the recent diplomatic storm over the deaths in its guest house, was thought to have $10 million to $15 million.

The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) declined to comment on how churches fit into their GDP figures, but a source there said they were included as “non-profit”, which falls under “other services” in the latest figures.

In 2013, the category contributed 2.5 per cent of GDP, the same as the financial sector.

A former banker at United Bank for Africa (UBA), who declined to be named, recalled being approached five years ago by a church that was bringing in $5 million a week from contributions at home or abroad.

“They wanted to make some pretty big investments: real estate, shares,” he said. “They wanted to issue a bond to borrow, and then use the weekly flows to pay the coupon.”

In the end, he said, the bank turned down the proposal on ethical grounds.

One pastor bought N3 billion ($18 million) in shares in the defunct Finbank, which later merged with FCMB, after it was rescued in a bail-out in 2009, a fund manager who handled the deal told Reuters. The pastor used a nominee trust account to keep his name off the books.

In 2011, Oyakhilome was investigated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and charged with laundering $35 million of contributions to his church in foreign bank accounts. He denied all wrongdoing and the case was dismissed for lack of evidence.

Oyedepo’s headquarters, “Canaanland”, is a 10,500-acre (4,250-hectare) campus in Otta, outside the commercial capital Lagos. It comprises a university, two halls of accommodation, restaurants and a church seating 50,000 people, with a total overflow capacity of five times that.

“You can see that everything this man touches turns to gold,” Nigerian Agriculture Minister, Akinwumi Adesina, said in a speech at a reception for Oyedepo’s 60th birthday at Canaanland last month.

Other dignitaries present included twice-president Olusegun Obasanjo and former military ruler Yakubu Gowon. A choir sang gospel songs as the guests cut an elaborate six-tiered cake and popped fizzy grape juice out of champagne bottles in golden wrapping — alcohol is banned in Canaanland.

A spokesman said the church has 5,000 branches across Nigeria, and 1,000 more in 63 other countries across five continents. But Oyedepo’s empire also includes two fee-paying universities which he built from scratch, a publishing house for Christian self-help books, and an elite high school.

Other pastors have similarly diversified ways of getting the Gospel of Christian salvation out.

Oyakhilome owns magazines, newspapers and a 24-hour TV station, and Joshua draws miracle-seekers from all over the world with claims that the holy water he has blessed cures otherwise incurable ailments such as HIV/AIDS.

Guests entering Oyedepo’s birthday marquee in Canaanland would have seen a picture of the poor household in South-west Nigeria where he grew up, a testament to a rags-to-riches story that many Nigerians would love to emulate.

Like US televangelists, Winners Chapel preaches the “prosperity gospel” that faith in Jesus Christ lifts people out of poverty, and that message partly explains the explosion of the Pentecostal movement in sub-Saharan Africa, where misfortune and poverty are often seen as having supernatural causes.

“We see giving as the only way to be blessed. Blessing other people is a way of keeping the blessings flowing,” said Oyedepo, whose blessings include a Gulfstream V jet and several BMWs.

Asked about Forbes’ estimate of his fortune, Oyedepo told Reuters: “For me, to have a fortune means someone who has what he needs at any point in time. I don’t see myself as having $150 million stacked up somewhere. Whatever way they found their figures, I am only able to say I am blessed by the Lord.”

He said he could not estimate the church’s total revenues or expenditure on items such as salaries because the various departments, including education, were too diverse.

The enterprises on the Canaanland campus, from the shops selling cold sodas and bread, to a woman boiling instant noodles and eggs for breakfast in a lodge, to pop-up book stalls hawking Oyedepo’s prolific literary output, are owned by the church’s estate, which employs their staff on its payroll, workers at all the outlets, he told Reuters.

Winners Chapel’s Corporate Affairs department said the church employs more than 18,000 people in Nigeria alone.

Oyedepo says the wealth the church gathers is invested in expanding it, and that if he did not use a private jet, he would be unable to oversee its many foreign operations and still return to Otta every week on time for Sunday’s worship.

Britain’s Charity Commission says it is reviewing potential conflicts of interest in his finances, and last month the Home Office (interior ministry) barred him from Britain, though it declined to say why.

Oyedepo said he knew nothing of the commission’s review, nor had the Home Office explained to him why he was barred.

A national conference to debate Nigeria’s constitution this year proposed that the mega churches should be taxed.

But with an election coming up in February, it is doubtful whether President Goodluck Jonathan, who is close to several mega pastors, would risk upsetting these influential men and their hefty congregations with a fat tax bill.

“There is no single government input on this premises,” Oyedepo told Reuters in the interview. “We supply our water, we make our roads, then you … say: ‘Let’s tax them’. For what?”

THISDAY

Lagos institutes coroner’s inquest into collapsed Synagouge building

The Lagos state government has appointed a coroner to make inquest into the circumstances that led to the collapse of a six storey hostel building at Synagouge Church of all Nations, Ikotun, Lagos.

The Coroner in this case is Magistrate O. A. Komolafe, who also sat as Coroner in the Dana Air crash case.

The state government instituted the Coroner’s inquest under the Lagos State Coroner’s System Law No. 7 of 2007.

It was instituted for the purpose of establishing the cause and manner of the recent incident of a collapsed building within the premises of the Synagogue Church of All Nations at Ikotun Egbe, Lagos and the several deaths that followed.

A total of 115 persons, majorly South Africans, allegedly died in the September 12, 2014 collapsed building.

A statement issued yesterday by the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Ade Ipaye, said the inquest will hold at the premises of the High Court of Lagos State, Oba Akinjobi Way, Ikeja.

The statement said the inquest was instigated by Ipaye under section 15 of the Coroner Law which provides that a Coroner shall hold an inquest whenever he is informed that the death of a deceased person lying within his Coroner District was as a result of a violent, unnatural or suspicious occurrence.

Ipaye emphasised that the Coroner has extensive powers to investigate the cause and circumstances of death and bring his findings and recommendations to the attention of appropriate authorities.

“In doing this, he has all the powers of a magistrate to summon and compel the attendance of witnesses, including medical examiners, and require them to give evidence, produce documents or present other relevant materials.

“The law requires the verdict of a Coroner as certified in writing to be forwarded to the State Attorney General and such verdict may form the basis of criminal prosecutions depending on the evidence collected.”

The statement added that the Coroner is expected to announce his sitting and visitation schedules and other details soon.

Meanwhile the state government has called on family members of victims of the collapsed building to submit samples that can aid forensic identification and DNA analysis of recovered bodies.

State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris, made the call yesterday, saying that the government had commenced the identification of recovered bodies from the collapsed building site.

He explained that the government considered it necessary to start forensic identification and DNA analysis of the recovered bodies in view of the need to identify each of them.

Idris appealed to family members, especially parents, children and siblings of nationals who believe their relations could have been in the collapsed building, to visit the Department of Forensic Medicine at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Ikeja from Friday September 26, 2014 to submit samples that can aid the forensic identification and DNA analysis of recovered bodies.

The Commissioner noted, however, that those eligible to give samples for the forensic identification and DNA analysis in order of preference include parents, children and siblings of the deceased.

Building Collapse Is Satan’s Work, Says Synagogue

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  building collapse

  •   Assures God will reveal perpetrators soon

(Reuters) – For supporters of “Prophet” TB Joshua, one of Africa’s best-known Christian preachers, the death of at least 80 of his congregation under the rubble of a Lagos guesthouse that collapsed a week ago was no construction accident.    “The church views this tragedy as part of an attack on The Synagogue Church Of All Nations,” said a statement on his official Facebook page on Thursday.

“In due course, God will reveal the perpetrators.”
Most of the deaths were South Africans, and Joshua said he was cooperating with the investigation.
Initially his members had refused entry to rescue workers, according to Nigeria’s emergency services, who noted that the Sept. 12 collapse occurred during building work, in which extra floors were being added.

Lagos state governor Babatunde Fashola was quoted in the media as saying the church had no permit for the extension.
Joshua’s public relations team said the church was adding three floors, but when asked if it had a permit they said Joshua’s existing public statements were all he was willing to say for now.

There are nearly monthly collapses of buildings in Lagos, all blamed on shoddy construction.
But many of his flock and other witnesses around the church were convinced of that “demonic forces” bent on destroying a “man of God” were behind the building’s demise.

In Nigeria, as in many parts of Africa, misfortunes of all kinds are often seen as an attack by an unseen enemy, living or dead. Even some newspaper columnists have come out to support Joshua.

Joshua’s church has for years drawn tens of thousands of followers from all over Africa and the world with claims that he and his “wise men” cure normally incurable ailments, including HIV/AIDS, spinal damage and chronic kidney disease, by casting out demons they say cause them.

A flood of pious church offerings have made Joshua Nigeria’s third-richest pastor, according to Forbes magazine, which in 2011 estimated his net worth at $10 million to $15 million.
His supporters include Nelson Mandela’s ex-wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, former Ghanaian President John Atta Mills, late South African Springbok rugby player Ruben Kruger and South Africa’s firebrand leftist opposition leader Julius Malema.

“CRAZY THEORIES”
In their account of how the church collapsed, Joshua’s PR team are circulating CCTV footage they say shows a mysterious aircraft circle it four times shortly before the incident, without fully explaining what the connection is.
A Reuters team that visited the site of the accident, where dozens of workers and construction vehicles were clearing up a tangle of steel and concrete dotted with mattresses and chairs, were shown the footage.

It wasn’t clear if the aircraft was the same one each time, and the video comprised four separate clips edited together. The next scene is of the building collapsing, with no aircraft.

“There’s something weird about the way the building collapsed. Everyone who’s seen the footage agrees,” said one British church member. “That clearly wasn’t a structural problem.”

Asked how the plane caused the building to fall, he said the church doesn’t want to draw any conclusions yet.
Reuters interviewed a dozen witnesses, all of them emphatic that they saw a low-flying plane they blamed for the collapse. Almost all of them talked of evil forces at work.

“This was clearly the work of Satan,” said Jonathan Nwankwo, 40, who though not a member of the church owns a flourishing supermarket patronised by its congregation.

South Africa, which said late on Thursday that 84 of its nationals were unaccounted for, with 67 confirmed dead, is taking a different view.

“They’ve come up with all sorts of crazy theories about planes or what have you, but the reality is the building was substandard. No proper engineering work was done on it,” a diplomatic source told Reuters.

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan has made no statement about the incident, and Lagos governor Fashola, who ordered the congregation to stop blocking access to rescue workers, appears to have been careful not to criticise Joshua personally.

Analysts say Nigeria’s megachurch leaders are so influential that few politicians dare upset them, especially just before a national election. Nigeria is set to hold one in five months, reports Reuters.