Court told Pastor Mackenzie secretly ate as followers starved

News · Samuel Otieno · October 29, 2025
Court told Pastor Mackenzie secretly ate as followers starved
Preacher pastor Paul Mackenzie during a court appearance. PHOTO/ODPP X
In Summary

The officer told the court that they had separated Mackenzie from the other suspects, and an informer had reported that the preacher secretly ate in his cell so his followers would not notice.

A police witness has told the court that controversial preacher pastor Paul Mackenzie secretly ate in police custody while his followers continued fasting, believing it would help them evade criminal charges.

Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Noor Abdi, the former Officer Commanding Malindi Police Station, testifying before Principal Magistrate Leah Juma, narrated that Mackenzie and several co-accused were detained at the station between June 6 and June 14, 2023.

According to the officer, during this period, 15 of the suspects reportedly refused to eat for eight consecutive days, insisting that they were fasting for divine intervention in their legal troubles.

“Your honour, we separated Mackenzie from the rest of the suspects, and our informer reported that Mackenzie ate while in the cell but did it secretly, so that his followers would not notice,” Abdi testified.

He added that the suspects became extremely weak during the hunger strike and declined medical assistance when taken to the hospital, insisting that their fasting was spiritual.

He also produced several communication signals sent to senior police commanders reporting the mass refusal of food by the detained Shakahola cult followers.

In addition to Abdi’s testimony, the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) presented Alex Tsofia, an excavator operator hired to construct a dam in Shakahola, Kilifi County.

Tsofia told the court that he had been contracted by Mackenzie and worked at the site for two weeks.

Prosecution also called Engineer Fredrick Ako from the National Water Harvesting and Storage Authority, who assessed the dam’s capacity and purpose.

His report described the structure not as an irrigation dam, but as a water harvesting pan with a storage capacity of 18,851.6 cubic metres, enough to supply water to 218 households, or approximately 1,090 people, throughout the year.

A subsequent inspection by the National Water Authority confirmed there was no evidence of irrigation or livestock use, indicating that the excavation was solely a water catchment project.

The report, however, estimated that the dam could supply up to 16,498 people for three month,s depending on the amount of rainfall and consumption levels.

The prosecution also produced a poignant testimony from Stephen Mwiti, whose personal life was shattered after his wife became a follower of Mackenzie.

Mwiti recounted how his wife’s obsession with the pastor’s sermons strained their marriage.

“I sometimes walked around with the TV remote in my pocket to stop her from watching Mackenzie’s preaching, but it didn’t help,” he told the court.

He said his wife eventually fled their home with their five children while pregnant with their sixth, joining the Shakahola community.

“When I heard some people had been rescued from Shakahola, I prayed I would reunite with my family. But I was devastated when I learned that my wife and all six children, including a one-month-old baby, had disappeared,” Mwiti said emotionally.

A DNA test later confirmed that one of the rescued children was his. When questioned by Mackenzie’s lawyer on whether he would consider reconciling with his wife, Mwiti said he had left the matter to the court and only sought justice.

Pastor Mackenzie and 92 co-accused are facing multiple charges at the Shanzu Law Courts under the Prevention of Terrorism Act and the Prevention of Organised Crime Act.

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