Browsing tag

CPCA

50 cattle seized from Kunonga

Excommunicated Anglican bishop Nolbert Kunonga’s wife used fictitious invoices to lay claim to the family’s 50 head of cattle that were attached to pay off money owed to the Church of the Province of Central Africa (CPCA), the High Court has ruled.

Rise and Fall of Bishop Nolbert Kunonga

AT St Paul’s Anglican Parish in Harare, a 58-year old plaque reads: “Erected April 1954 by the generosity of the people of Marlborough”. And yet for the past five years, the generality of the Anglican Church flock in Marlborough worshiped in the wilderness.

Banks sucked into Anglican saga

HARARE – The Anglican Church saga has sucked in top banking and lending organisations with the Church demanding that institutions such as the Standard Chartered Bank ensure that Nolbert Kunonga returns money he inherited and assets he took over during his five-year reign.

Kunonga threatens to shoot journalists

HARARE – Disgraced ex-communicated clergyman Nolbert Kunonga on Wednesday threatened to shoot journalists for covering his ongoing shenanigans, as five of his “thugs” were arrested late Thursday.

Lawyers welcome ruling on Anglican property

Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) welcomes the judgment delivered by the Supreme Court on Monday 19 November 2012 in which the court upheld an appeal by the Church of the Province of Central Africa (CPCA) led by Bishop Chad Gandiya.

Police stop Anglican prayer retreat

HARARE, (AP) — Zimbabwean police stopped a retreat of 80 clergy over claims that their prayer gathering was not given police clearance under sweeping security laws, the country’s mainstream Anglican church said Tuesday.

Bishop from hell directing police violence

The Daily News on Sunday today exposes the direct link between ex-communicated Anglican Church Bishop Nolbert Kunonga on one hand, and the police and President Robert Mugabe’s Zanu PF party on the other, in his desperate bid to take over the church.

Kunonga responds to dossier on abuse of Anglicans in Zimbabwe

Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has come and gone, but the challenges facing Anglicans in Zimbabwe for the past four years remain unresolved. This is chiefly because the Archbishop is responsible for problems rocking the church, not only in Zimbabwe, but the worldwide Anglican Communion wrties Dr Nolbert Kunonga.