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Gilbert Deya

Gilbert Juma Deya (/ˈdə/) is a stonemason turned evangelist who lived in Britain from the mid-1990s until 2017, when he was extradited to Kenya to face charges of stealing five children between 1999 and 2004.[1] He was acquitted of the charges in 2023.[2]

Church in Liverpool

His organization, Gilbert Deya Ministries, claims that Deya is able to help infertile women to conceive through the power of prayer.

Background Edit

Deya was born in the morning of 2 February 1937 in Juja, Kiambu County, outside of Nairobi and was the eleventh child in a family of fifteen children. He belongs to Luo tribe, and his name "Juma" means Sunday, which is the day he was born. His father, Samuel Oyanda Deya was a sisal plantations worker from Bondo working in Juja. His parents were never meant to be a couple because his mother, Monica Nono Deya, declined the arranged marriage with his father.

He attended primary school but the school preacher dropped out because of bullying and poverty. He started preaching Jinja, Kampala, in Uganda, where he beat up a woman for hitting the children of his sister and worked there as a porter.

He married his 14-year-old wife, Mary Anyango, on 27 December 1958 when he was 21. They gave birth to fifteen children in total. He started the "Salvation of Jesus Christ Church" in 1976.[3]

He was ordained by the United Evangelical Church of Kenya and styles himself "Archbishop".[4] He was an evangelist in Kenya in the late 1980s to early 1990s, but moved to the UK, establishing Gilbert Deya Ministries in 1997. The ministry at its peak activity had church services at rented and owned buildings in Liverpool, London, Birmingham, Nottingham, Luton, Reading, Manchester and Sheffield. In 2006 it acquired a building and planning permission in Leeds.[5] The church claimed to be "the fastest growing Ministry in the UK and worldwide".[citation needed]

In 2013 Deya was arrested in the UK and charged with raping and attempting to rape a woman and sexually assaulting a teenage girl.[6] He was found not guilty on all counts in 2014.[7]

The church was placed under its formal investigations by the Charity Commission in 2004 and again in 2016, and the commission appointed Interim Managers in March 2021 to manage the affairs of the charity.

'Miracle Babies' and child trafficking Edit

The Gilbert Deya Ministries claimed that Deya's powers allow him to be able to cause infertile women to become pregnant. Deya claimed that "through the power of prayer and the Lord Jesus" he has helped sterile women give birth. In the UK, one woman was claimed to have had three children in less than a year. The women travelled to Kenya in order to "give birth".[8][9] On her return a suspicious GP alerted the local social services department, leading to court proceedings to protect the babies.

Deya's wife, Eddah (also known as Mary Deya), was arrested during November 2004 in Nairobi and charged with stealing children.[10] Ten children, none of whom had any genetic connection to the Deya family, were found at Deya's House.[8] Twenty babies were placed in foster care in Kenya after DNA tests showed they had no connection to their alleged mothers.[11] Rose Atieno Kiserem, a former pastor with Deya's ministry was jailed along with Mrs. Deya. Upon her release from jail, Kiserem confessed that the 'miracle babies' were "a hoax created by the Deyas and their accomplices to deceive me and other God-fearing people."[12]

Deya had a warrant out for his arrest in Kenya for the trafficking of babies out of the country. The Kenyan police alleged that the ministry is a baby-snatching ring, and they petitioned for his extradition from the UK. Deya sought political asylum from his base in Glasgow. He was arrested by police at Edinburgh Sheriff Court in 2006.[13]

In November 2004 the High Court in the UK ruled that a 'miracle baby' in London was the victim of child trafficking, and that the supposed miracle displayed was a ruse in order to generate funds from a "deceived congregation". Justice Ryder ruled that in order to maintain the illusion of a genuine birth, the child's 'mother' was seriously assaulted "and a live child who had been born to another family was presented to her as her child." He also ruled that "[the baby's] birth as described was a falsehood not a miracle."[4]

On 13 December 2006, Deya was arrested in London by the Metropolitan Police. A police spokesman said Gilbert Deya was detained under an arrest warrant issued by Kenyan authorities, who had charged him with child abduction and trafficking. He was ordered by a court on 8 November 2007, to be extradited from the UK to Kenya to face five counts of child stealing.[14]

Deya appealed against extradition on the grounds that he might face torture in Kenya, but in late 2008 his case was rejected by the High Court and leave to appeal to the House of Lords was refused.[15][16][17] It was reported in April 2010 that Deya was still in England and David Lammy, Deya's MP, enquired of the government why he had not yet been extradited. Lammy was concerned that justice was being denied to several of his constituents who were victims of the trafficked babies fraud. The Home Office responded that it was still considering representations from Deya's solicitors that sending him to Kenya would breach his human rights.[18][19]

In January 2011, a court in Kenya convicted Mary Deya of stealing a baby from Kenyatta National Hospital in 2005[20] and making a false statement that she had given birth to the baby in question.[21] She was later acquitted on separate charges of obtaining registration for five children irregularly.[22]

In September 2011, news reports indicated that all avenues of appeal had been exhausted and Deya would soon be extradited to Kenya.[23][24]

The London Evening Standard reported on 21 October 2016 that Deya had applied for a judicial review of the decision to extradite him.[25]

On 12 July 2017, Premier Christian Media reported that the High Court had refused Deya's application for a judicial review and that he would be extradited.[26]

On 3 August 2017, Deya was extradited from the UK to Kenya to face child trafficking charges. He was immediately arraigned in court for child trafficking offences.[27] He subsequently divorced his wife, supposedly because her involvement in baby theft had tarnished his reputation.[20]

In April 2020, Deya's hearing was delayed because of COVID-19. However, the case resumed in early 2021. Deya's legal team launched a bid to block prosecutors from calling several witnesses from abroad whose testimonies had been halted because of COVID-19. However, Chief Magistrate Francis Andayi denied the motion.[28] In May 2023, Deya gave testimony in which he denied the charges against him.[20]

Local press reported that judgment was passed by the court in Nairobi on 29 June 2023.[29] Deya was acquitted on all charges based on a lack of evidence.[30] Magistrate Robison Ondieki ruled that the prosecution had "failed to establish circumstantial evidence". Following the verdict, Deya suggested that he would seek to return to the UK.[2]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Gilbert Deya: 'Miracle babies' pastor extradited to Kenya".
  2. ^ a b Rukanga, Basillioh (18 June 2023). "Gilbert Deya: Kenyan 'miracle babies' pastor acquitted of child trafficking". BBC News.
  3. ^ "Gilbert Deya: The chequered story of a Kenyan preacher". The Daily Nation. 29 January 2016.
  4. ^ a b "London Borough of Haringey v Mrs E (2004) EWHC 2580 (Fam) (12 November 2004)". bailii.org. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  5. ^ Hugh Muir (11 January 2006). "Hugh Muir's diary | Politics". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2010-04-10.
  6. ^ "'Miracle babies' preacher Gilbert Deya charged with sex offences". The Guardian. 28 October 2013.
  7. ^ "Kenyan preacher cleared of UK rape and sexual assault charges". The Citizen. 23 December 2014.
  8. ^ a b Seenan, Gerard (30 September 2004). "Preacher who produces 'miracle babies' wanted by Kenyan police". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 10 April 2010.
  9. ^ Kelbie, Paul (30 September 2004). "Evangelist dismisses child-trafficking charges as a set-up". London: The Independent. Retrieved 11 April 2010.
  10. ^ Douglas, Jon (1 April 2010). "Miracle babies' pastor in UK despite extradition". BBC. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  11. ^ "'Miracle baby' a victim - judge". news.bbc.co.uk. 12 November 2004. Retrieved 11 April 2010.
  12. ^ Mwinzi, Bernard (November 26, 2009). "Deya insider: There were no miracle babies, it was all a hoax". Daily Nation. Retrieved 11 April 2010.
  13. ^ "'Miracle baby' pastor held in UK". news.bbc.co.uk. 15 June 2006. Retrieved 11 April 2010.
  14. ^ Mallan, Caroline (8 November 2007). "The mystery of 'miracle babies'". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 11 April 2010.
  15. ^ Kwamboka, Evelyn (28 November 2008). "Is Deya finally on his way back to Kenya?". The Standard (Kenya). Retrieved 11 April 2010.
  16. ^ "Pastor loses extradition appeal". news.bbc.co.uk. 31 October 2008. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  17. ^ "'Miracle' pastor appeal refused". news.bbc.co.uk. 27 November 2008. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  18. ^ Douglas, Jon (1 April 2010). "'Miracle babies' pastor in UK despite extradition". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  19. ^ Redfern, Paul (April 3, 2010). "Deya's MP wants him deported for trial in Kenya". Daily Nation. The Nation. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  20. ^ a b c Munguti, Richard (9 May 2023). "Bishop Deya reveals marriage woes as he defends himself against 'miracle babies' charge". Nation.
  21. ^ Agoya, Vincent (10 June 2015). "Mary Deya opts to complete prison term for baby theft". Nation Africa.
  22. ^ Judy Ogutu (2011-12-21). "Shoddy probe hands Deya wife sweet freedom". The Standard (Kenya). Retrieved 2012-05-02.
  23. ^ Lawrence, Tom (21 September 2011). "'Miracle babies' pastor to be extradited". London: The Independent. Retrieved 21 September 2011. However, the Home Office said Theresa May has formally sanctioned his extradition after he exhausted all avenues of appeal in the UK. A spokesman for the department said: "On Tuesday 13 September the Secretary of State decided that Deya's extradition should proceed."
  24. ^ Douglas, Jon (21 September 2011). "'Miracle babies' pastor to be extradited to Kenya". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 21 September 2011.
  25. ^ "Gilbert Deya: Preacher in 'miracle babies' case fights to stay in Britain". The Evening Standard. 21 October 2016.
  26. ^ "Pastor to be extradited to Kenya accused of stealing babies". Premium. 12 July 2017.
  27. ^ "Gilbert Deya: 'Miracle babies' pastor extradited to Kenya". BBC News. 4 August 2017.
  28. ^ Wambulwa, Annette (11 March 2021). "Deya fails to block witnesses from testifying in child theft case". The Star.
  29. ^ "Bishop Gilbert Deya to know his fate today in child theft case". Nairobi News. 2023-06-29. Retrieved 2023-07-10.
  30. ^ "Kenyan court acquits 'miracle baby' televangelist of trafficking". Al Jazeera. 17 July 2023.

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Gilbert Juma Deya ˈ d eɪ e is a stonemason turned evangelist who lived in Britain from the mid 1990s until 2017 when he was extradited to Kenya to face charges of stealing five children between 1999 and 2004 1 He was acquitted of the charges in 2023 2 Church in LiverpoolHis organization Gilbert Deya Ministries claims that Deya is able to help infertile women to conceive through the power of prayer Background EditDeya was born in the morning of 2 February 1937 in Juja Kiambu County outside of Nairobi and was the eleventh child in a family of fifteen children He belongs to Luo tribe and his name Juma means Sunday which is the day he was born His father Samuel Oyanda Deya was a sisal plantations worker from Bondo working in Juja His parents were never meant to be a couple because his mother Monica Nono Deya declined the arranged marriage with his father He attended primary school but the school preacher dropped out because of bullying and poverty He started preaching Jinja Kampala in Uganda where he beat up a woman for hitting the children of his sister and worked there as a porter He married his 14 year old wife Mary Anyango on 27 December 1958 when he was 21 They gave birth to fifteen children in total He started the Salvation of Jesus Christ Church in 1976 3 He was ordained by the United Evangelical Church of Kenya and styles himself Archbishop 4 He was an evangelist in Kenya in the late 1980s to early 1990s but moved to the UK establishing Gilbert Deya Ministries in 1997 The ministry at its peak activity had church services at rented and owned buildings in Liverpool London Birmingham Nottingham Luton Reading Manchester and Sheffield In 2006 it acquired a building and planning permission in Leeds 5 The church claimed to be the fastest growing Ministry in the UK and worldwide citation needed In 2013 Deya was arrested in the UK and charged with raping and attempting to rape a woman and sexually assaulting a teenage girl 6 He was found not guilty on all counts in 2014 7 The church was placed under its formal investigations by the Charity Commission in 2004 and again in 2016 and the commission appointed Interim Managers in March 2021 to manage the affairs of the charity Miracle Babies and child trafficking EditThe Gilbert Deya Ministries claimed that Deya s powers allow him to be able to cause infertile women to become pregnant Deya claimed that through the power of prayer and the Lord Jesus he has helped sterile women give birth In the UK one woman was claimed to have had three children in less than a year The women travelled to Kenya in order to give birth 8 9 On her return a suspicious GP alerted the local social services department leading to court proceedings to protect the babies Deya s wife Eddah also known as Mary Deya was arrested during November 2004 in Nairobi and charged with stealing children 10 Ten children none of whom had any genetic connection to the Deya family were found at Deya s House 8 Twenty babies were placed in foster care in Kenya after DNA tests showed they had no connection to their alleged mothers 11 Rose Atieno Kiserem a former pastor with Deya s ministry was jailed along with Mrs Deya Upon her release from jail Kiserem confessed that the miracle babies were a hoax created by the Deyas and their accomplices to deceive me and other God fearing people 12 Deya had a warrant out for his arrest in Kenya for the trafficking of babies out of the country The Kenyan police alleged that the ministry is a baby snatching ring and they petitioned for his extradition from the UK Deya sought political asylum from his base in Glasgow He was arrested by police at Edinburgh Sheriff Court in 2006 13 In November 2004 the High Court in the UK ruled that a miracle baby in London was the victim of child trafficking and that the supposed miracle displayed was a ruse in order to generate funds from a deceived congregation Justice Ryder ruled that in order to maintain the illusion of a genuine birth the child s mother was seriously assaulted and a live child who had been born to another family was presented to her as her child He also ruled that the baby s birth as described was a falsehood not a miracle 4 On 13 December 2006 Deya was arrested in London by the Metropolitan Police A police spokesman said Gilbert Deya was detained under an arrest warrant issued by Kenyan authorities who had charged him with child abduction and trafficking He was ordered by a court on 8 November 2007 to be extradited from the UK to Kenya to face five counts of child stealing 14 Deya appealed against extradition on the grounds that he might face torture in Kenya but in late 2008 his case was rejected by the High Court and leave to appeal to the House of Lords was refused 15 16 17 It was reported in April 2010 that Deya was still in England and David Lammy Deya s MP enquired of the government why he had not yet been extradited Lammy was concerned that justice was being denied to several of his constituents who were victims of the trafficked babies fraud The Home Office responded that it was still considering representations from Deya s solicitors that sending him to Kenya would breach his human rights 18 19 In January 2011 a court in Kenya convicted Mary Deya of stealing a baby from Kenyatta National Hospital in 2005 20 and making a false statement that she had given birth to the baby in question 21 She was later acquitted on separate charges of obtaining registration for five children irregularly 22 In September 2011 news reports indicated that all avenues of appeal had been exhausted and Deya would soon be extradited to Kenya 23 24 The London Evening Standard reported on 21 October 2016 that Deya had applied for a judicial review of the decision to extradite him 25 On 12 July 2017 Premier Christian Media reported that the High Court had refused Deya s application for a judicial review and that he would be extradited 26 On 3 August 2017 Deya was extradited from the UK to Kenya to face child trafficking charges He was immediately arraigned in court for child trafficking offences 27 He subsequently divorced his wife supposedly because her involvement in baby theft had tarnished his reputation 20 In April 2020 Deya s hearing was delayed because of COVID 19 However the case resumed in early 2021 Deya s legal team launched a bid to block prosecutors from calling several witnesses from abroad whose testimonies had been halted because of COVID 19 However Chief Magistrate Francis Andayi denied the motion 28 In May 2023 Deya gave testimony in which he denied the charges against him 20 Local press reported that judgment was passed by the court in Nairobi on 29 June 2023 29 Deya was acquitted on all charges based on a lack of evidence 30 Magistrate Robison Ondieki ruled that the prosecution had failed to establish circumstantial evidence Following the verdict Deya suggested that he would seek to return to the UK 2 References Edit Gilbert Deya Miracle babies pastor extradited to Kenya a b Rukanga Basillioh 18 June 2023 Gilbert Deya Kenyan miracle babies pastor acquitted of child trafficking BBC News Gilbert Deya The chequered story of a Kenyan preacher The Daily Nation 29 January 2016 a b London Borough of Haringey v Mrs E 2004 EWHC 2580 Fam 12 November 2004 bailii org Retrieved 9 April 2010 Hugh Muir 11 January 2006 Hugh Muir s diary Politics London The Guardian Retrieved 2010 04 10 Miracle babies preacher Gilbert Deya charged with sex offences The Guardian 28 October 2013 Kenyan preacher cleared of UK rape and sexual assault charges The Citizen 23 December 2014 a b Seenan Gerard 30 September 2004 Preacher who produces miracle babies wanted by Kenyan police London The Guardian Retrieved 10 April 2010 Kelbie Paul 30 September 2004 Evangelist dismisses child trafficking charges as a set up London The Independent Retrieved 11 April 2010 Douglas Jon 1 April 2010 Miracle babies pastor in UK despite extradition BBC Retrieved 9 April 2010 Miracle baby a victim judge news bbc co uk 12 November 2004 Retrieved 11 April 2010 Mwinzi Bernard November 26 2009 Deya insider There were no miracle babies it was all a hoax Daily Nation Retrieved 11 April 2010 Miracle baby pastor held in UK news bbc co uk 15 June 2006 Retrieved 11 April 2010 Mallan Caroline 8 November 2007 The mystery of miracle babies news bbc co uk Retrieved 11 April 2010 Kwamboka Evelyn 28 November 2008 Is Deya finally on his way back to Kenya The Standard Kenya Retrieved 11 April 2010 Pastor loses extradition appeal news bbc co uk 31 October 2008 Retrieved 13 April 2010 Miracle pastor appeal refused news bbc co uk 27 November 2008 Retrieved 13 April 2010 Douglas Jon 1 April 2010 Miracle babies pastor in UK despite extradition news bbc co uk Retrieved 13 April 2010 Redfern Paul April 3 2010 Deya s MP wants him deported for trial in Kenya Daily Nation The Nation Retrieved 9 April 2010 a b c Munguti Richard 9 May 2023 Bishop Deya reveals marriage woes as he defends himself against miracle babies charge Nation Agoya Vincent 10 June 2015 Mary Deya opts to complete prison term for baby theft Nation Africa Judy Ogutu 2011 12 21 Shoddy probe hands Deya wife sweet freedom The Standard Kenya Retrieved 2012 05 02 Lawrence Tom 21 September 2011 Miracle babies pastor to be extradited London The Independent Retrieved 21 September 2011 However the Home Office said Theresa May has formally sanctioned his extradition after he exhausted all avenues of appeal in the UK A spokesman for the department said On Tuesday 13 September the Secretary of State decided that Deya s extradition should proceed Douglas Jon 21 September 2011 Miracle babies pastor to be extradited to Kenya news bbc co uk Retrieved 21 September 2011 Gilbert Deya Preacher in miracle babies case fights to stay in Britain The Evening Standard 21 October 2016 Pastor to be extradited to Kenya accused of stealing babies Premium 12 July 2017 Gilbert Deya Miracle babies pastor extradited to Kenya BBC News 4 August 2017 Wambulwa Annette 11 March 2021 Deya fails to block witnesses from testifying in child theft case The Star Bishop Gilbert Deya to know his fate today in child theft case Nairobi News 2023 06 29 Retrieved 2023 07 10 Kenyan court acquits miracle baby televangelist of trafficking Al Jazeera 17 July 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gilbert Deya amp oldid 1166105767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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