The camp he runs in the ancient city claims to provide accommodation, medical care and education for 4,000 children, “most of them orphans”, as well as 500 widows and missionaries, using funding from local institutions, NGOs and churches abroad.
Benin-based Pastor Solomon
Folorunsho, who said he is on a self-proclaimed mission to help humanity,
creating the International Christian Centre for Missions (ICCM), is facing
accusations of physically and sexually abusing children seeking refuge in his
church’s camp.
But witnesses according to
an AFP report — children, their relatives, former missionaries and social
workers — paint a far darker picture of the pastor and the treatment of those
in his care.
“At first he’s very subtle,
quiet — like somebody who wouldn’t hurt a fly,” one former church worker said
of the charismatic preacher. I loved him, I loved his charisma.”
But during months of
interviews, witnesses detailed how those living at his 30-hectare (75-acre)
facility frequently go hungry and thirsty and endure atrocious hygiene
conditions.
All accused the pastor of
physical abuse, while some accused him of sexual harassment.
Pastor Solomon, aged in his
50s, admits having problems with food and sanitary conditions in the camp but
denies any mistreatment.
“There is no bad treatment
here. We don’t do abuse,” he told AFP.
“Feeding them is a
challenge… but we don’t have anything to hide. We are helping humanity.”
Concerns about the camp
have a long history. Three years ago, the UN children’s agency UNICEF sent an
assessment team to the site, who filed a report with damning conclusions.
“Pastor Solomon runs this
camp as if it is his ‘kingdom’. He controls the movement and actions of every
person in the camp through a group of ministers and specially selected
children,” the team wrote in the confidential report, seen by AFP.
The UNICEF investigators
said what they saw, coupled with interviews with children, caregivers and NGO
workers, prompted “strong concerns regarding the possibility that Pastor
Solomon may be engaged in sexual activities, or at a minimum, displaying
grooming behaviours with girls in the camp”.
Witnesses also told AFP
that around a dozen young girls work for the pastor as his personal servants
and receive preferential treatment.
“A girl who refused to work
for him was punished and starved. When he beat you, he wouldn’t stop until you
bled seriously,” said Rahila, a 16-year-old girl who left the camp several
months ago.
“He had names that he
called different girls… He would comment on the size of my butt, and he would
say our chests looked like pineapples or stuff like that,” she said.
He had names that he called
different girls… He would comment on the size of my butt, and he would say our
chests looked like pineapples or stuff like that,” she said.
All the witnesses’ names
have been changed to protect their identities.
Other children and adults
said that those who upset the preacher were treated brutally.
“I was always hungry, there
was never enough food or water. When we complained we got beaten with anything
he could lay his hands on,” said 12-year-old Hauwa.
“No one leaves Pastor
Solomon without a scar — whether it is psychological or physical,” a former
follower told AFP after hesitating at first to talk about his ordeal.
Convincing people to talk
about their experiences with Pastor Solomon is a painstaking task. Some have
refused to speak out for 20 years.
“Most of the girls were
coming from poor homes. They would sleep with him and in exchange he would pay
for their school fees,” said a former female follower who was at the church in
the late 1990s.
She said her going to the
authorities about the abuse she experienced and witnessed was out of the
question in a country where powerful men are rarely brought to justice.
She was also scared of
juju, the traditional black magic widely feared by people in the region.
“I was scared to talk. He
uses juju, people told me I would die.”
Evangelical preachers draw
fanatical followings across the deeply Christian south of Nigeria. Pastor
Solomon’s power stems greatly from his beliefs.
“He says he’s sent by God.
To confront him is like confronting God himself,” a former church worker said.
Those who have served under
him and lived in the camp say the pastor uses the fear of devil to keep people
in line.
On the church’s website, in
a short biography entitled “I Saw Jesus” — translated into six languages
including Russian and Chinese — he claimed that he was saved from Satan by God
himself.
Pastor Solomon’s
International Christian Centre for Missions has expanded hugely since he
founded it in 1990 with just a dozen young female followers.
In 1992, he set up the
first “Home for the Needy”, taking in poor children whose parents entrusted
them to his care on the promise of an education.
A former missionary said
the pastor would sometimes misrepresent the children as orphans to raise
sponsorship in Europe or the United States.
Ten years later, the church
had grown to more than 200 branches, with missionaries and preachers working
across southern Nigeria and funds coming from evangelical churches abroad.
“He was always browsing the
internet to look for church organisations all over the world” to target for
donations, the missionary said.
“He would send pictures of
us or of the children, asking us to look sad. He was saying that white people
are so emotional.”
But it was the Boko Haram
jihadist insurgency more than 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) to the north of
Benin City that caused a surge in the numbers at the camp.
As the violence displaced
millions of people and grabbed global attention in 2013, Pastor Solomon’s group
turned its attention to children in the conflict zone of northeastern Nigeria.
“The pastor’s people came
(to Maiduguri) and convinced parents to send their children to Benin City where
they would have a good education, with free food,” said Rakiya, who allowed
five of her six children to go.
“At the camp, parents would
be given bags of rice, bus fare, jerrycans of palm oil and the like. So when
they returned to Maiduguri they would tell other parents ‘Benin is good’,” she
said.
– No records –
No records are publicly
available about how many children were brought from northern Nigeria to the
camp.
Pastor Solomon told AFP
that the Nigerian army and the intelligence service “have a copy of the
register”, but this could not be verified.
UNICEF and the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) wanted to set up a programme to
reunite children from the camp with their families, but were denied access to
their identities.
“At this time, camp
management has been unable/unwilling to provide this information,” UNICEF said
in its report.
UNICEF maintains that it
passed on the report to local authorities in 2016 to make them aware of the
“concerns”.
But nothing appears to have
been done.
On the contrary, Pastor
Solomon had full support of former Edo governor Adams Oshiomhole, now head of Nigeria’s
ruling party, the All Progressives Congress.
“With the former governor,
we once had a good relationship,” Pastor Solomon told AFP. “When parents wanted
to get their children back, he would give them money, he would give them a
gift.”
Today, while denying any
accusations of maltreatment, the pastor admits that the huge influx of children
placed a major strain on the camp and that the church struggles for money.
Camp workers have told
local media that to feed the estimated 4,000 children and 500 adults at the
camp costs hundreds of dollars a day — and that does not include medicine,
water, education and clothing.
“We also have a problem
with hepatitis, measles, chickenpox and scabies; we don’t have enough
accommodation for them, this is a big challenge,” the pastor acknowledged.
Witnesses said that
children sleep on mats on the ground in huge hangars without adult supervision,
relieving themselves in the forest, complaining of hunger and thirst and not
washing, and that many have died in the disease-ridden conditions.
– ‘It’s our responsibility’
–
While conditions keep
deteriorating at the camp, some European and US evangelical groups still send
donations and materials to Nigeria.
The congregation of German
pastor Gunther Geipel — who describes Pastor Solomon as a “friend and brother”
— is one of them.
Geipel dismisses the
allegations against the pastor as “tales” from “jealous people”.
“I cannot imagine that this
is true,” he told AFP.
AFP put the allegations
against Pastor Solomon and his camp to Edo State commissioner for social
affairs Maria Edeko, who took up her duties several months ago.
She said she had never
heard of the UN report or accusations of abuse and poor conditions at the camp
but insisted they would be investigated.
She confirmed the
authorities did not have access to the camp registry.
“From now on, I can assure
you that my ministry will be on top of the situation. We need monitoring,” she
said. “It’s our responsibility.”
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