Bishop David Oyedepo |
The British government has said it is
investigating David Oyedepo’s Winners’ Chapel International’s request to
establish an independent school in the country.
The fee-paying school, Kingdom Heritage Model School in Dartford, was set to open to children from the age of four in September.
The
school, which will teach “Biblical truths” in each subject, is
currently being considered by the British Department for Education. The
church itself is said to be under investigation by the Charity
Commission.
Among those kicking
against the church’s opening a school in the country is the National
Secular Society, an organisation that campaigns for the separation of
religion and state.
The NSS expressed concern that a school linked to the “controversial preacher” was set to open in England.
In
a letter to the Department for Education, the NSS had questioned the
suitability of the organisation to run educational establishments in the
country, raising concerns over both educational standards and child
welfare.
In 2011, Oyedepo was,
reportedly, captured on video assaulting a young girl at one of his
church service. The girl was alleged to be possessed by some evil
spirits.
In 2012, the Metropolitan
Police stated that children believed to be possessed by evil spirits or
believed to be witches are at “clear and immediate risk of significant
harm.”
In considering the school’s
registration, the NSS has also asked the DfE to look into the details
surrounding the death of a three-year-old child who drowned in the
toilets of a Kingdom Heritage Model School operated by Winners Chapel in
Nigeria in 2012.
The NSS campaigns
manager Stephen Evans, said, “Given this Church’s association with
belief in witchcraft and the actions of its leader, we hope the
department will give serious consideration to the reliability of the
school’s commitment to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of
children.”
According to the rights
advocacy group, the proposed school acknowledges “God as the sovereign
and only wise God in all affairs of life and learning,” and believes the
Bible to be the ultimate source of wisdom.
When
our correspondent contacted the church through phone numbers provided
on its website, one of the respondents said he was a technical person
and as such could not comment on the issue.
But another staff of the church, who refused to give his name, said the allegation was “a scam, it cannot be true.”
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