Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,208,356 members, 8,002,342 topics. Date: Thursday, 14 November 2024 at 09:24 AM

Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC - Religion - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Religion / Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC (32757 Views)

U.K Fines Pastor Chris Oyakhilome For Spreading Covid19 Conspiracy Theories. / The Road That Leads To Pastor Chris Oyakhilome's Hometown In Edo (Photos) / Pastor Chris Oyakhilome Gets Jet Plane Gift From Loveworld Music & Arts Group (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) ... (15) (Reply) (Go Down)

Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by nlfpmod: 7:11pm On Apr 21

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LRuvgUWbN0A?si=noAAdiBsNPy4dzAW

Chris Oyakhilome: Nigerian pastor pushing malaria vaccine conspiracy theories

Dressed in his signature closed-neck suit, Pastor Chris Oyakhilome stared directly into the camera, declaring that "there was never a proof that vaccines ever worked".

Everyone had been "lied to" about vaccination, he said in the sermon broadcast on his church's YouTube channel in February.

Known as "Pastor Chris", the sixty-year-old is one of Africa's best-known evangelical preachers.

The BBC has reviewed dozens of his sermons from 2023 and 2024 and found that he has been spreading anti-vaccine messages to his followers, specifically targeting the new malaria vaccine as it is being distributed in African countries.

Malaria is a huge problem in Africa. About 95% of malaria-related deaths occurred on the continent in 2022, with children under five accounting for around 80% of the deaths, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

In the last six months, Pastor Oyakhilome's company has also produced at least five 20-minute anti-vaccine documentaries broadcast in church services or shared on his video streaming platform, evading social media companies' policies against anti-vaccine content.

The announcement last year of the rollout of a vaccine against malaria - after decades of trying - was hailed by experts as a major achievement that could save tens of thousands of lives.

According to the UN children's agency, Unicef, successful pilot vaccine campaigns since 2019 in Kenya, Ghana and Malawi caused a 13% drop in the deaths of children of eligible age.

But medical experts fear the influential pastor's far-reaching sermons might negatively affect vaccine take-up in Africa.

In August last year, he warned in a sermon of "an evil agenda that has been long in the making".

He then spread a conspiracy theory popular in the anti-vaccine community - that vaccines are a way of "depopulating the world".

He also falsely said that "malaria was never a problem to those in Africa".

"Spreading false information about vaccines, especially from influential figures like religious leaders, can contribute to the perpetuation of myths and misconceptions, further fuelling vaccine hesitancy.

"This can have devastating consequences for public health, particularly in the WHO African region where vaccine-preventable diseases occur frequently," a WHO spokesperson said.

Pastor Oyakhilome's remarks were included as one of the disinformation trends "to watch" ahead of the malaria vaccine rollout in a report released in March by the WHO-backed The Africa Infodemic Response Alliance.

We asked the pastor about his statements against vaccination through his company's and church's e-mails. We did not receive a response.

He founded the Christ Embassy church in Nigeria's main city, Lagos, in the 1990s and went on to amass hundreds of thousands of followers around the world.

In 2011, he was featured in Forbes magazine as one of Nigeria's richest pastors with an estimated net worth of $30m to $50m (£24m to £40m).

According to the magazine, the pastor's diverse business interests included newspapers, magazines, a local television station, a record label, satellite TV, hotels and extensive real estate.

His empire, named LoveWorld Inc, has since grown. It now includes a streaming service, a messaging app with over a million downloads on Google's app store and a microfinance bank.

Once a week, Pastor Oyakhilome preaches at the church's huge camp ground in Asese, along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.

When the BBC visited the church last November, hundreds of pastors from different nationalities filled its auditorium for an annual conference. Flags of dozens of countries were displayed inside.

His "massive online teachings and healing services" have a global attendance of "7 billion people", according to the Christ Embassy's website - this is highly unlikely given that the planet's population is estimated at eight billion.

Winnifred Ikhianosin, 25, is a regular at the church. She told the BBC she refuses to take vaccines.

"The man of God told us," she said. "And I have also done my research."

According to Ada Umenwaliri, associate director of the African Studies Centre at the US-based University of North Carolina, Pastor Oyakhilome has a "stronghold on his followers who are looking up to him".

"Pastors and religious leaders will always play a significant role in the choices their followers make," she added.

But poverty and the lack of health infrastructure in Africa could enable churches to have a greater hold over people when it came to vaccination, she said.

In an article published on the Nigerian news site, The Cable, last year, writer Julius Ogunro, who attended the pastor's church for over a decade, said: "We need to sound the alarm now. The agenda [that] Pastor Chris is pushing is potentially dangerous and has nothing to do with the Christian faith."

One name is repeated frequently by Pastor Oyakhilome: Bill Gates. The billionaire is one of the malaria vaccine's biggest backers, but has also been subject to vaccination conspiracy theories for years.

In a sermon in August 2023, the pastor broadcast a clip from a TED talk Bill Gates gave in 2010 as an example of "those who have an agenda for depopulation of the world".

While giving a talk on reducing carbon dioxide emissions, Mr Gates said: "First, we've got population. The world today has 6.8 billion people. That's headed up to about nine billion. Now, if we do a really great job on new vaccines, health care, reproductive health services, we could lower that by, perhaps, 10 or 15%."

His declaration was taken out of context by Pastor Oyakhilome. Mr Gates did not advocate for the world's depopulation.

He has clarified in the past that he saw population growth and health improvement as complementary: "When health improves, families choose to have less kids."

Mr Oyakhilome also said that the World Mosquito Program facility in Colombia belonged to the Gates Foundation, accusing it of producing genetically modified mosquitoes as a strategy for depopulation.

The mosquito factory, established to reduce the ability of mosquitoes to transmit viruses, belongs to a non-profit group of companies owned by Monash University in Australia, and it has stressed that its method do not involve the use of genetically modified organisms.

Pastor Oyakhilome is no stranger to anti-vaccine disinformation. Recently he has also targeted the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, meant to protect women against cervical cancer.

"They have something else up their sleeve. It's not about cancer," he said during a service aired on 2 September 2023.

Nigeria began the mass vaccination campaign for girls in October 2023 in a bid to drastically reduce cervical cancer rates.

The disease claims the lives of over 8,000 women in Nigeria every year. In 2021, a major study funded by Cancer Research UK found the HPV vaccine was cutting cases of cervical cancer by nearly 90%.

In the past, Pastor Oyakhilome made multiple unfounded claims about anti-tetanus injections, polio vaccines, and other childhood immunisations.

The pastor also falsely stated that the messenger RNA vaccine alters the DNA.

But the vaccine does not alter people's DNA. It takes part of a virus's genetic material - or messenger RNA - to make the immune system learn to recognise it and produce antibodies.

During the Covid pandemic, Pastor Oyakhilome's church received a £125,000 ($155,000) fine from the British media regulator Ofcom.

It said his network Loveworld, broadcast in the UK, showed "misleading and potentially harmful statements about the coronavirus pandemic and vaccines".

Mr Ogunro, the writer who left the church, said he was worried about the pastor's influence.

"His claims about vaccination scare me. We need to find a way to regulate preachers like him."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-67577223.amp

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Kobojunkie: 7:13pm On Apr 21
nlfpmod:
....
Africans, who do una these things abeg? lipsrsealed lipsrsealed lipsrsealed lipsrsealed

26 Likes 1 Share

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Akfrenzy(m): 7:15pm On Apr 21
grin he'll soon fake his own death 😆

28 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by TChief117: 7:15pm On Apr 21
angry

Smh
Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by 1000Capacity: 7:15pm On Apr 21
His "massive online teachings and healing services" have a global attendance of "7 billion people", according to the Christ Embassy's website - this is highly unlikely given that the planet's population is estimated at eight billion


This part is what BBC dont understand... You can count 7 million vies as 7 million people. It's part of data analysis.
Pastor Chris is actually saying the truth this man spoke about COVID 19. That vaccine isn't what it was painted to be


*Modified *

I hereby refute everything I have written up there smiley

53 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Lamasta(m): 7:15pm On Apr 21
Let scientists respond to him and not BBC so that they will show him facts and evidence of the wonders of vaccine...

69 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by richard870(m): 7:16pm On Apr 21
Hmmm

1 Like

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by josiah27: 7:16pm On Apr 21
Na to go become pastor like this

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Adaorababy(f): 7:16pm On Apr 21
.
Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Kobojunkie: 7:16pm On Apr 21
Akfrenzy:
grin he'll soon fake his own death 😆
🤣🤣🤣🤣

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by kingsways: 7:16pm On Apr 21
Pastor Chris is right

We do not need vaccines. It wasn’t vaccines that ended covid. What ended Covid is the fact that God put in the human body a natural ability to develop a hard immunity once it has suffered and recovered from such diseases. Most people, without taking the vaccine developed a hard immunity against Covid on their own, that’s what ended Covid.

We all have gone to school and cannot be railroaded into accepting life-damaging vaccines offered by people with very questionable moral standards . The Pastor’s teachings are based on verifiable science, and anyone who wants to respond MUST respond from the point of science

We cannot allow evil people who are bent on world depopulation to have their way. We cannot allow these evil people to be injecting some rubbish vaccine into healthy people.

127 Likes 11 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Holyfic: 7:16pm On Apr 21
Separation of power
Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by gaby(m): 7:16pm On Apr 21
Brother Chris, the Hell Raiser...

2 Likes

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by obaidan: 7:17pm On Apr 21
I know Oyakhilome can be funny most times, but on this lets face it, what is the difference between Chris Oyakhilome and BBC in amplifying conspiracy theories.
And yes Oyakhilome asked the right question, how did they get the malaria fatality number. The only thing that is wrong with Africa as a continent, the west will never admit ...... providing a safe haven for African leaders to run to and invest stolen funds is the problem of Africa

46 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Eniolohunda: 7:17pm On Apr 21
I remember he was also against covid vaccine then

3 Likes

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by NewNg1: 7:17pm On Apr 21
Okay

1 Like

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by samuelson06(m): 7:17pm On Apr 21
BBC have started again, and some stwepid people in Nigeria would still support them.

48 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by RenaissanceGuy: 7:17pm On Apr 21
Reverse psychology.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Aldebaran(m): 7:17pm On Apr 21
grin
Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by omoredia: 7:18pm On Apr 21
Conspiracy theory aka the truth

18 Likes 1 Share

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by lomprico(m): 7:19pm On Apr 21
I won't take that vaccine as long as Bill Gates is involved.

68 Likes 1 Share

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by DrAda(f): 7:19pm On Apr 21
Quite dangerous to declare that vaccines don't work.

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Judolisco(m): 7:19pm On Apr 21
Seriously if only dis man knows d effect that malaria vaccine will have in Africa, in Nigeria especially, he won't talk dis way.... If he was alive during d small pox era, he would have said d vaccine is fake as well....
After misleading your congregation, you'll go abroad for check up

Many of us dat have lost siblings and loved ones to malaria will gladly take d vaccine

33 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Thoughts007: 7:19pm On Apr 21
Pastor Chris this and Pastor Chris that!
If the doctor tell you that you are sick, and then God tells you that health is yours whose report would you rather belive?

The government told us that there are millions of infected individuals in Nigeria, and they used this probably false statistics to lobby for international funding which ofcourse they looted, but nobody is talking about all that anymore. All they are concerned about is Pastor Chris Affirmation of God's word that none of these diseases should even be recognized.

People tend to always hate what they don't understand.

24 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by omoredia: 7:20pm On Apr 21
Anybody that wakes the people up becomes the enemy of the deep state. Pastor Chris is right. Covid19 too was a scam

68 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by tefishy(m): 7:20pm On Apr 21
Wahala just too much for this world.

God knows I won't be a part of those taking that vaccine

9 Likes

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by kingsways: 7:20pm On Apr 21
Pastor Chris teachings are based on verifiable facts and science

Anyone who wants to respond must respond from the point of facts and science

38 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Kobojunkie: 7:20pm On Apr 21
Lamasta:
Let scientists respond to him and not BBC so that they will show Jim facts and evidence of the wonders of vaccine
I doubt this mouth part cares about any of that. We all watched it make a joke of Nigeria during the COVID disaster of 2020. There was evidence everywhere but he didn't care. undecided

Religion is home to some of the most mentally disconnected out there. undecided

10 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by ceejay80s(m): 7:20pm On Apr 21
Be like Jehovah witness wey no dey collect blood , u go just die sara, nobody go send uu for gate of heaven....

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by RxSameer(m): 7:20pm On Apr 21
Pastor Chris is actually saying the truth this man spoke about COVID 19 in 2020 that it was a hoax and no one believed him where is COVID today I raise yansh for pastor Chris..

30 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Bubu4Sea: 7:21pm On Apr 21
Eniolohunda:
I remember he was also against covid vaccine then
The covid vaccine is known to be a harmful vaccine.

In the UK a man confronted the UK Prime Minister, saying that the vaccine gave heart attacks
https://youtube.com/shorts/rZabUBKlF68?si=c6I9Xtf2ObdBBXGt

18 Likes 1 Share

Re: Chris Oyakhilome's Malaria Vaccine Conspiracy Theories By BBC by Alexiiydon: 7:21pm On Apr 21
Abeg summarize am if you read am because I no fit read this long epistle

1 Like

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) ... (15) (Reply)

Deeper Life Bible Church: The Nigerian Church That Has Stood The Test Of Time / "Leave Us The Sheeples (LUTS)" Campaign: By Emusmithy / Marriage Alert: Prophet Jeremiah Omoto Fufeyin Splashes Millions On Wedding

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 46
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.