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Methodist Bishop to face disciplinary committee
By Masahudu Ankiilu Kunateh, Ghanadot
The Administrative Bishop of the Methodist Church, Ghana,
who is alleged to have sexually misconducted himself, has
been summoned to appear before the Disciplinary Committee of
the church by February 3, 2010.
A final decision will then be taken on the bishop, Rt. Rev.
Kow Bosomefi Egyir, who is currently on suspension and
holidaying in the United States of America (USA). He was
suspended after he had allegedly admitted before a pastoral
committee set up to investigate the matter that he had
misconducted himself sexually.
Bishop Egyir is alleged to have raped the 23-year-old
daughter of another high-ranking member of the church. The
alleged victim, a student in a tertiary institution in
Ghana, was alleged to have been sent by her father to
deliver a parcel to the bishop when the incident allegedly
took place.
Responding to allegations that the church was covering up an
alleged sexual misconduct by Bishop Egyir, the Presiding
Bishop of the church, the Most Rev. Professor Emmanuel
Asante, told some journalists in Accra, that no issue of
rape had been reported to the church.
He said even if a charge or complaint of rape was reported
to the church, it was not competent to deal with criminal
matters and so it would have advised the complainant to
report the case to the appropriate authorities.
Throwing more light on the allegation, the Most Rev. Prof.
Asante said a man purporting to be the victim’s brother
reported the bishop’s alleged sexual misconduct to the
church.
Consequently, a high-powered pastoral committee was set up
to investigate allegation. The Most Rev. Prof. Asante said
when Bishop Egyir appeared before the committee, he
allegedly admitted having misconducted himself sexually but
indicated that “Bishop Egyir did not say he had raped her”.
The Presiding Bishop said sexual misconduct was an issue
which the church did not deal with lightly and cited
sub-sections one and five of Section 155 of the Standing
Orders of the church, which listed immorality or imprudent
and unchristian behaviour or misconduct, as well as
unministerial conduct, as offences.
He said after Bishop Egyir had allegedly admitted the
offence, the pastoral committee suspended him from all
ministerial duties, including his position as Administrative
Bishop.
He said a disciplinary committee was immediately set up to
prefer the appropriate charges in relation to the offences
to address the issue formally.
According to him, before the charges could be laid, the
Bishop requested for permission to travel to the USA to
attend to personal duties.
The Most Rev. Prof. Asante said Bishop Egyir had written to
the church to acknowledge receipt of the charges and the
necessity for him to appear before the committee.
“Whether he appears or not, the church will institute
further disciplinary action against him, including
expulsion, which is the highest punishment. This is where we
are now,” he added.
He said after the final decision had been taken, a pastoral
letter would be issued to the congregation and the press
because of the interest the issue had generated.
“I want to state that there is no collusion whatsoever from
the church. The church is not covering up anything or
anybody. What has reached us is the issue of immorality,” he
said.
He said even if the Bishop was prosecuted and set free by
the appropriate authorities on the basis of consensuality,
the church would still handle the moral aspect of the
matter.
“The issue of rape has not come to our notice at all. That
was not the complaint lodged with us. We do not have the
capacity to deal with criminal matters and we will not do
that.
We will also not undertake or attempt to do anything which,
by the law, is the responsibility or preserve of some
institution or person,” he stated.
The Presiding Bishop said anyone or any institution could
take up any legal action against Bishop Egyir.
"The church wishes to assure all concerned that in dealing
with the allegations, it will respect the laws of the land,
including the Constitution, and will not do anything to
violate or undermine them," he stated.
Meanwhile, the United States Embassy in Accra says it has
not received any petition from any individual or
organisation for the repatriation of the Administrative
Bishop of the Methodist Church of Ghana to face prosecution
in Ghana.
"The Ambassador, His Excellency Donald G, Teitelbum, is out
of town, We have checked from the mail's registry and from
the Ambassador's Secretary records and there is no such
petition," Ms Zainab Mahama of the Public Affairs Section of
the US Embassy was responsing to a question as to what the
embassy was doing about the petition.
She said the first time the embassy heard of it was through
radio discussions on Wednesday and in the Insight newspaper.
As to what the embassy would do, she said there was nothing
before the embassy for any action to be taken and it would,
therefore, be difficult to say what was being done.
The petitioner, however, faxed a copy of a receipt note
signed by a guard at the embassy as having received a letter
from Mr Jacob Osei Yeboah.
Another source at the embassy, however, told the Daily
Graphic in a separate interview that unless the Bishop was
criminally charged, nothing could be done about it.
It stated that even if the Bishop was charged, it was only
the police which could request the embassy for his
repatriation.
When contacted, the Attorney-General and Minister of
Justice, Mrs Betty Mould-Iddrisu, said the
Attorney-General's Department could only take up the matter
after a formal complaint had been lodged.
"The petitioners can petition us so that we can take it up
from there," she said.
According to her, the A-G's office would need witnesses to
facilitate any investigations and prosecution, if there was
the need.
The petitioner, Mr Osei Yeboah, who is the leader of the
Resurrection Methodist Church, Adenta, described the
inaction of the Methodist Church and the police as saddening
and disturbing.
According to him, when persons considered as low class raped
women, the police took appropriate action and the law was
made to work.
"When can the triumph of justice be witnessed when those who
are supposed to protect the law are themselves breakers of
the law and the law is only applied against the poor, weak
and vulnerable in society?" he asked.
Mr Yeboah said the offence was not just about morality but
also a criminal one and the church must be seen to be doing
the right thing and not condoning criminality.
He explained that the family could have refused to report
the incident to the police because of the stigma and also
the fact that the victim's father was one of the topmost
laity officials in the church.
"This rape case by the second-in-command of the Methodist
Church is a clear-cut case for religious bodies, civil
society and the law enforcement agencies in Ghana." he
added.
Ghanadot
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