Summary
- During his heydays, Bishop Yego had the ear of former President Daniel Moi.
- He was the President’s Bishop after all.
- His dalliance with the late Mr Moi, however, began in an unlikely way.
When he retired in December last year as the head of the
African Inland Church (AIC), Bishop Silas Yego had planned it out well: keep off city life and retreat to the agricultural rich Kitale in Trans Nzoia County.
African Inland Church (AIC), Bishop Silas Yego had planned it out well: keep off city life and retreat to the agricultural rich Kitale in Trans Nzoia County.
The man of cloth, who served as the presiding
Bishop of AIC for 18 years, moved to his Naisamabu farm, on the
outskirts of Kitale town, where he started practicing mixed farming.
He would occasionally come to the city to visit friends and family as well as see some of the projects he initiated.
During
his heydays, Bishop Yego had the ear of former President Daniel Moi. He
was the President’s Bishop after all. His dalliance with the late Mr
Moi, however, began in an unlikely way.
In a recent media interview, the cleric revealed his first contact with Mr Moi which marked a new turn in his ministry.
“In 1984, I presided over a wedding ceremony in Eldama Ravine
that Mzee Moi also attended. My sermon happened to have touched the
President though he never mentioned it until two years later during the
graduation ceremony of AIC Kenya pastors at Pwani Bible College,” he
told a local daily.
“After the ceremony, the
president’s handlers came looking for me. I was shocked and I thought I
must have said something that had offended him. I was taken to Mombasa
State House where the President was waiting for me,” he was further
quoted as having said.
And with that Mr Yego’s was
thrust into a new life and dined with the high and mighty. Although his
reign at the helm of the AIC Church was not without controversy, Bishop
Yego was a likeable man.
In 2018, the High Court ended a
decade-long battle with a breakaway group who had threatened to split
the church into two factions.
Then High Court judge
Chacha Mwita ruled that a group led by an excommunicated member of the
church, David Mbuvi, was illegal and Yego’s faction was then recognised
by the Registrar of Societies.
Even President Moi, who had immense influence in the church had failed in his quest to reconcile the warring members.
According
to court records, the leadership crisis began in 2007 when an election
to appoint officials was conducted. Mr Mbuvi then claimed that he had
won and went ahead to take over the leadership of the church.
This
led to the church conducting another election in 2008 where the its
faithful confirmed Bishop Yego and the others as officials.
But he made sure he had reconciled with the members before he handed over the reins to Abraham Mulwa.
In
interviews, Bishop Yego said Mr Moi would invite him to his Kabarak
home for prayers after which they would tour his expansive farm. They
were good friends and the former head of State would confide in him some
of his plans, including his plan to name President Uhuru Kenyatta his
successor in 2002.
He said although former vice
president Kalonzo Musyoka was his close friend, Mr Moi had told him not
to pass the message (of naming Uhuru his successor) to Mr Kalonzo, who
was then the Kanu national organising secretary.
In
February, while Kenyans mourned President Moi, Bishop Yego reminded them
that Moi had publicly asked for forgiveness and, therefore, persons
holding grudges against him were only hurting themselves.
“President
Moi personally apologised to those he had wronged and also forgave all
those who had wronged him. He had no grudge. I am a witness and as a
Christian, I believed him,” he said.
All was well for
the retired cleric until March this year when a loan he borrowed six
years ago threatened to disrupt his retirement. He rushed to court, but
failed to convince the judge to stop Transnational Bank from selling his
property in Kileleshwa.
According
to Justice David Majanja, Bishop Yego admitted the indebtedness. And
because of that, he cannot suffer loss that cannot be compensated by
damages in case he succeeds in convincing the court that the bank was
wrong.
“According to the correspondence between the
parties, the plaintiff has been in default since 2019. He has not met
promise to settle the debt despite several offers by the bank to accept
settlement,” Justice Majanja said when he dismissed his application
seeking to restrain the bank from auctioning the property.
Documents
filed in court showed that Bishop Yego is a customer of the bank and in
2014, he borrowed a loan of Sh140 million from Transnational Bank.
To secure the loan, he charged his property in Kileleshwa. His plan was to construct some 50 apartments on the parcel.
However,
he failed to service the loan forcing the lender to issue a warning.
And when the warning was not heeded, the bank instructed Purple Royal
Auctioneers to sell the property to recover the money, which stood at
Sh143 million.
But the retired Bishop challenged the
planned auction saying the bank had undervalued the property and that
the outstanding balance was Sh86 million not the Sh143 million as quoted
by the lender.
Bishop
Yego also said the project he undertook fell into problems caused by
third parties and arbitration proceedings commenced and was decided in
his favour.
However, he was yet to receive the
arbitration award and had commenced the process of execution before the
High Court through a separate suit.
He said after
falling into arrears, he approached the bank with a proposal on the
repayments. Then, the bank had indicated that the amount owed was Sh116
million.
Documents he filed in court showed that he
made great effort and repaid Sh34 million, with the last instalment
being made in January.
The retired cleric also wanted
the court to stop the planned sale arguing that a third party was
willing to buy the property at Sh200 million but that the process was
derailed in the wake of Covid-19, whose effects has sharply cut sales
and reduced appetite for properties.
Born at Lelmokwo,
Nandi County, on January 1, 1950, Bishop Yego had, at his retirement,
said he will dedicate his time to advocate for social justice and
peaceful transition in various spheres in public life.
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