Tag: Pastor mackenzie

  • Shakahola massacre trial:  DPP closes last case after calling 95 witnesses

    Shakahola massacre trial: DPP closes last case after calling 95 witnesses

    The DPP has closed the final of the four Shakahola massacre cases, in which Paul Nthenge Mackenzie and 94 others faced 238 counts of manslaughter, shortly after the investigating officer detailed the horrifying extent of Mackenzie’s control over his followers, which led to the deaths of 429 people.

    Chief Inspector Raphael Wanjohi told Chief Magistrate Alex Ithuku that Mackenzie and his co-accused shared a suicide pact, perpetrating the massacre with the pretext of meeting Jesus before the end of December 2020.

    The 95th and last prosecution witness stated that Mackenzie instructed his followers to hasten their deaths through starvation in order to meet Jesus before his purported December arrival on Earth.

    “The suspects had a mutual agreement and shared intention, both individually and collectively, for a suicide pact. They had a common purpose to commit acts of manslaughter by overseeing the deaths of their children through enforced fasting,” said Wanjohi.

    He added, “They had a specific intent to fast to death to meet Jesus and possessed knowledge of committing an unlawful act, as evidenced by the way graves were concealed.”

    Wanjohi told the court that Mackenzie and 94 co-accused bore the greatest responsibility for the crime of manslaughter of 238 deceased persons.

    Ithuku further heard that those who resisted the pact fled the settlement, highlighting the extreme indoctrination and coercion imposed by Mackenzie over his followers.

    The group had settled several kilometers deep inside the dense Shakahola forest, strategically away from authorities.

    Mackenzie’s militia monitored movements and ensured strict compliance with the deadly fasting, the court further heard.

    The settlement’s remoteness was striking, with Wanjohi revealing that it was 14 kilometers from schools, 35 kilometers from Lango Baya Police Station, and 32 kilometers from the nearest chief’s camp, hindering detection.

    Inside the deep forest, away from the eyes of authority, Mackenzie and his close associates imposed his doomsday ideology on hundreds he had lured through indoctrination.

    Call data analysis revealed systematic coordination between Mackenzie and his security team.

    The homicide investigator said these communications were used to monitor activities within the expansive Shakahola forest while enforced fasting was underway.

    On the first day of exhumation operations, approximately 25 kilometers inside the forest, Wanjohi and his team uncovered 65 graves, including 14 containing multiple bodies.

    The same day, 17 bodies were exhumed and meticulously documented before being transferred to Malindi Subcounty Hospital for preservation.

    Each body was assigned a unique identifier, placed in labelled body bags, and transported to the subcounty hospital mortuary.

    The mass graves, containing several bodies of male and female adults and minors, were shallow, with some bodies wrapped in bed sheets or lesos tied with knots before being buried, the court also heard.

    Wanjohi told Hon. Ithuku that some bodies were transferred from one grave to another, likely to avoid detection.

    Fast-growing crops were planted on mass graves, many flattened to conceal evidence.

    Several months after the exhumation operations, the homicide detective and his team joined pathologists to conduct post-mortems in four phases on 429 bodies to establish the causes of death.

    Starvation was the leading cause of death, followed by injuries, while some deaths remained undetermined due to decomposition.

    DNA testing helped confirm identities and link victims to relatives.

    Investigators highlighted that only two burial permits had been obtained, far below legal requirements, reflecting systematic lawlessness.

    Children and adults were often buried together, with graves flattened or concealed by crops.

    Investigators said these practices demonstrated deliberate attempts to obscure evidence of the crimes.

    Wanjohi explained that followers abandoned jobs, sold property, withdrew children from schools, and destroyed identity documents before relocating to Shakahola.

    The extreme fasting imposed by Mackenzie directly caused numerous deaths, with Mackenzie’s armed militia guarding women and children undergoing fasting inside canopies.

    Mackenzie and his lieutenants developed a coded language to convey key messages to followers during the fasting period within Shakahola forest.

    Among the coded language terms are “Wateule,” referring to members; “Mataifa,” to outsiders; “Harusi,” to burial; “Kunyakuliwa,” to rapture; and “Kanisa Jagwani,” to mean Shakahola.

    This secrecy reinforced control and prevented outsiders from understanding internal operations.

    Searches at Mackenzie’s premises recovered DVDs, religious books, files, and registers containing radical end-times teachings.

    These materials illustrated the ideological framework guiding followers’ fatal compliance.

    Arrests continued during police operations, with suspects intercepted while fleeing Shakahola Forest or travelling to Malindi.

    A total of 62 suspects were arraigned before Shanzu Law Courts, with others presented under miscellaneous applications or custodial orders.

    Between June 6 and 10, 2023, suspects staged hunger strikes in custody.

    Six were hospitalised, and one suspect died.

    Charges of attempted suicide were later withdrawn, and the accused were subsequently charged with 283 counts of manslaughter, among others.

    Investigators relied on mapping, forensic evidence, DNA testing, and witness statements to establish the scale of atrocities.

    The matter will be mentioned on 3 March 2026 for direction on submissions by parties.

    The magistrate will subsequently set a date to deliver his ruling on whether there is a case to answer.

    The prosecuting team comprises Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions Jami Yamina and Joseph Kimanthi, Principal Prosecution Counsels Alex Ndiema, Victor Owiti and Betty Rubia and Prosecution Counsel Yassir Mohamed.

     

    SOURCE: ODPP

  • Shakahola Massacre: DPP lines up 422 witnesses against Mackenzie, 94 others

    Shakahola Massacre: DPP lines up 422 witnesses against Mackenzie, 94 others

    The Prosecution has lined up 422 witnesses to prove 238 counts of manslaughter against Shakahola massacre prime suspect Paul Nthege Mackenzie and 94 others.

    Chief Magistrate Hon. Alex Ithuku further heard that besides the testimonies of those witnesses, the DPP will table electronic and other exhibits to firm up the case.

    The prosecution team on Monday confirmed supplying the evidence to the defense lawyers expressing confidence of proving the case beyond any reasonable doubt.

    Prosecution Counsel Martin Mbote, holding brief for the prosecution team, informed the court that the defense will receive a few sets of statements and exhibits being prepared by the investigators.

    The defense team led by Lawrence Obonyo confirmed that investigators have served them with a bundle of statements and exhibits to be relied on by the prosecution on Monday 20th May 2024.

    Obonyo indicated that the investigators have given an undertaking to supply them with one or two remaining pieces of evidence before the hearing date.

    Hon Ithuku certified the matter ready for hearing starting on 12 – 15 August 2024 and 9- 12 September 2024.

    The court reiterated to parties that the proceeding will be uninterrupted and conducted on the day to day basis to accord justice to all parties including Mackenzie and his co- accused who have been denied bond.

    The 40 women and 55 men linked to 429 deaths in the Shakahola massacre were faced with 238 counts of manslaughter contrary to Section 202, as read with Section 205 of the penal code.

    They allegedly in pursuance of a suicide pact for the object of their death and others not before court jointly killed 238 people.

    They allegedly committed the offences on an unknown date between January 2021 and September 2023 at Shakahola area in Malindi Sub-County within Kilifi County.

    They all pleaded not guilty to all counts of manslaughter, which were read to them for four and half hours.

    The prosecution team include Senior Assistant DPP, Mr.Kiprop; Principal Prosecution Counsels, Gituma, J.V Owiti, and Betty Rubia and prosecution Counsel Victor Simbi and Yassir Mohamed.