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Editor’s note: This story has been updated
to include a statement from Indiana Area Bishop Michael J. Coyner,
president of the General Council on Finance and Administration board.
This story also has been updated to include information on the trial of
Joshua Bule, Joseph Kanyike and the Rev. John Kiviiri.
A UMNS Report
By Heather Hahn and the Rev. J. Richard Peck*
7:00 P.M. ET Oct. 2, 2012
United Methodist Bishop Daniel Wandabula of the East Africa Conference. A UMNS file photo by Annette Spence.
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Bishop Daniel Wandabula, who leads the East Africa Annual (regional)
Conference, says he blames the decisions of United Methodist church
agencies to withhold funds from his conference on a campaign “of
malice, mud-slinging, character lynching and insurrection.”
The General Council on Finance and Administration, the denomination’s finance agency, recommended Sept. 27 that all United Methodist bodies cut off funds to the East Africa Conference until further notice.
The agency’s board also filed a formal complaint against Wandabula
with the Africa Central Conference College of Bishops dealing with
concerns about Wandabula’s use and accountability of funds.
Another United Methodist agency, the Board of Global Ministries, announced Aug. 8 its decision to suspend all funds indefinitely to the East Africa Annual Conference.
Both agencies took action after three internal audits since April
2011 by African auditors of the conference treasury in Kampala, Uganda.
Bishop Peter Weaver, chair of the audit committee of Global Ministries,
told United Methodist News Service that regional auditors found
“unsatisfactory accounting practices.”
Wandabula disagreed with that assessment.
“There have been audits and the EAAC has responded to the audit
queries to the best of our knowledge and ability,” he said. “It is
therefore not true that the EAAC has failed for several years to
provide complete and accurate financial audits of general church funds
received. If there are still discrepancies between the audit and the
response then we can further narrow the gap.”
Wandabula responded Tuesday, Oct. 2, afternoon to emailed questions
from United Methodist News Service after calls, texts and an email Sept
27 and 28 seeking his response to the finance agency’s actions.
He contended that the general church agencies are siding with a
blackmail attempt by an anonymous emailer who used the name “Journey
Jonah.”
“It is unfortunate that some of the officials of the church support
these acts, which are criminal in nature in our country and which
promote hatred and malice instead of embracing unity and love,”
Wandabula said.
John Goolsbey, executive of administration at the General Council on
Finance and Administration, said the finance agency’s recommendation
“was a result of a review of information and a discussion with the chair
and staff members” of the Board of Global Ministries Internal Audit
Committee.
“As stewards of the general funds of The United Methodist Church,
GCFA has the responsibility to determine that funds have been
distributed solely for the purposes of the stated mission of the entity
as defined by the General Conference, the governing board and donor
designations,” Goolsbey said. “Based on the information currently
available in (Board of Global Ministries’) audits, we cannot confirm that is the case.”
Indiana Area Bishop Michael J. Coyner, president of the General Council
on Finance and Administration board, said the agency’s Audit and Review
Committee “studied the situation very thoroughly and made their
recommendations on the basis of finances not on the basis of any
internal politics of the (East Africa Annual Conference).”
When contacted by United Methodist News Service, United Methodist
Board of Global Ministries declined to comment on Wandabula's
allegations.
‘Journey Jonah’ and arrests
Wandabula complained to the Ugandan police on Oct. 21, 2009, when
the anonymous “Journey Jonah” sent an email to the bishop demanding
$300,000. Attached to the email was a document, labeled “report,” which
contained allegations against the bishop.
On Aug. 30, 2011, “Journey Jonah” sent a report with further
allegations against Wandabula to the Council of Bishops and several
executives at the Board of Global Ministries but did not supply
documentation or a name and full contact information.
In September 2011, the Ugandan police arrested three United
Methodists in Uganda and charged them with sending “Journey Jonah’s”
emails to Bishop Wandabula.
The Rev. John Kiviiri, at that time a district superintendent in the
East Africa Annual Conference, and Joseph Kanyike, brother of Kiviiri
and an intern with the Board of Global Ministries, were arrested first.
Joshua Bule, Kiviiri’s son, was arrested later. All were charged with
attempting to blackmail Wandabula .
To date, the three have appeared in court some 20 times. But each
time, individuals the court deemed important to the case were missing,
and the trial has been rescheduled. The last time the three appeared
was Sept. 3 when the magistrate was absent. They returned to court on
Oct. 3.
A new magistrate has been assigned to the case. She told the court on
Oct. 3 that she needs more time to review the specifics of the case.
The next hearing is scheduled Nov. 16.
United Methodist News Service reported on the arrests Oct. 4, 2011.
If found guilty, the three face a minimum of three years in prison
and could serve up to 10. The Board of Global Ministries has hired an
attorney for Kanyike. Wandabula suspended Kiviiri from his pastoral
duties in mid-December. That suspension was still in effect Sept. 17.
Kanyike told United Methodist News Service that Wandabula has offered
reconciliation to the trio, but only if they admit that they attempted
to blackmail him. Kanyike said they would not sign the confession
because they are innocent.
Longtime questions
Questions and accusations about Wandabula’s handing of contributions
in the East Africa Conference have been swirling since 2005.
The former Pittsburgh East District of the Western Pennsylvania
Annual Conference became concerned in 2005 about funds it had sent to
the East Africa Conference
After not being able to obtain satisfactory accounting for the
money, the Rev. Jeff Greenway, a district superintendent from 1999 to
2004 and now lead pastor of Reynoldsburg (Ohio) United Methodist
Church, filed a complaint on Nov. 11, 2010, with Bishop Leo A. Soriano, then president of the Central Conference College of Bishops. Greenway said he has not received a response to his letters.
Soriano has not yet responded to an email request for comment.
Nancy Denardo, a former Western Pennsylvania Annual Conference lay
leader and co-leader of the Pittsburgh East District effort, also wrote
asking for help. Among those to whom she sent letters were Bishop
Larry Goodpaster, president of the Council of Bishops at that time, and
Bishop Gaspar Domingos, president of the Africa Central Conference
College of Bishops. Goodpaster replied that the issue had to be raised
in the Africa Central Conference College of Bishops. Denardo said she
has not received a response from Domingos.
The Western Pennsylvania Annual Conference has asked the Judicial Council to rule on whether funds given to the East Africa Conference were used in accordance with the intent of the donors as required by Paragraph 258.4 of the 2008 Book of Discipline.
The council, the denomination’s top court, will consider Denardo's
questions when it next meets Oct. 24-27 in the Chicago area.
Effects of suspension
Wandabula said the problems in Uganda stem from “insurrectionists”
in Uganda who “are trying to overthrow the bishop after trying to
blackmail him.”
He said the formal complaints he faces “cap a long process of
harassment and underhand undermining of the Resident Bishop” of the
East Africa Annual Conference.
“But the ripple effect of the suspension (of funds) will be in the
whole conference,” he said. “This is most unfair and unfortunate for
the other countries in the EAAC, which do not have this infighting.”
He said the beneficiaries of United Methodist projects in the East Africa Annual Conference are the ones who are suffering.
The East Africa Annual Conference includes Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda and
the new nation of South Sudan. The conference office is in Kampala,
Uganda.
*Peck is a retired clergy member of New York Annual Conference. Hahn is a staff reporter for United Methodist News Service.
News media contact: Heather Hahn, Nashville, Tenn. (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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