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Kenyan court orders exhumations in suspected cult-related deaths

A Kenyan court has ordered the exhumation of bodies suspected to belong to people who were starved and suffocated in the same county where hundreds of members of a doomsday cult were found dead two years ago, prosecutors said on Wednesday.

Forensic experts and homicide detectives from the directorate of criminal investigations gather to exhume bodies of suspected followers of a Christian cult named as "Good News International Church" who believed they would go to heaven if they starved themselves to death in Shakahola forest in Kenya on May 9 2023.
Forensic experts and homicide detectives from the directorate of criminal investigations gather to exhume bodies of suspected followers of a Christian cult named as "Good News International Church" who believed they would go to heaven if they starved themselves to death in Shakahola forest in Kenya on May 9 2023. (REUTERS/Stringer/ File photo )

A Kenyan court has ordered the exhumation of bodies suspected to belong to people who were starved and suffocated in the same county where hundreds of members of a doomsday cult were found dead two years ago, prosecutors said on Wednesday.

The bodies in the new case are believed to be buried in shallow graves on the outskirts of Malindi in southeastern Kenya's Kilifi County, and 11 suspects are being investigated, Kenya's office of the director of public prosecutions said on X.

“Investigators suspect many individuals were murdered through starvation and suffocation,” it said.

“The victims may have been starved and suffocated as a result of adopting and promoting extreme religious ideologies.”

More than 400 bodies were exhumed from the nearby Shakahola Forest in 2023 in one of the world's worst cult-related disasters in recent history.

In that case, prosecutors have alleged cult leader Paul Mackenzie ordered his followers to starve themselves and their children to death so they could go to heaven before the world ended.

Mackenzie, who faces charges of murder and terrorism, has denied the accusations.

The prosecutor's office said people in the area of the recently discovered graves had been unable to account for the whereabouts of several children, leading to suspicion of foul play.

The court ordered the exhumations to be followed by postmortem examinations, DNA testing and toxicological analysis, it said.

In April, Kenyan police also recovered two bodies and rescued 57 people who looked weak and frail from a church in the country's west.

Reuters


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