One of Britain's most sinister and dangerous religious cults made
irregular payments ot Indonesian police officials in order to
halt an investigation into the group's controversial activities,
Sunday Business can reveal.
The London Church of Christ (LCC), a registered British charity
that has been accused of using brainwashing techniques on its
members, paid officers based in Jakarta after four of the cult's
UK leaders had been arrested, after being found preaching on the
streets of the capital.
Under Indonesia's strict Islamic Laws, Christian worship is not
permitted in public places.
Documents marked as "private and confidential" which
were written by one of the arrested LCC leaders, have been obtained
by Sunday Business. They reveal that donations - or "special
contributions" as the LCC calls the money - raised to send
a mission team to Jakarta in February 1990 were used partly to
ensure that the authorities dropped their enquiries into the group.
The LCC team was headed by John Louis and Daniel Eng, two graduates
recruited by the church while they were students in the UK.
According to papers written by Eng on 7 August 1991, he, Louis,
and two others were "subjected to police interrogations"
because of their church activities. They were also threatened
with "imprisonment" by what Eng describes in a secret
report as "corrupt authorities."
Eng left the LCC after his experiences in Jakarta. He has since
moved to the US and resumed his full-time university education.
"I was forced to hand over money raised in the UK, to police
officers in Jakarta," Eng confirmed. "I did this after
being given specific instructions by my superiors.
"The money - which amounted to several thousands of pounds
- went to the officers who were investigating the church's activities
in Jakarta to stop them making their enquiries."
On Tuesday, Home Secretary Michael Howard is scheduled to meet
representatives from the anti-cult movement who wish to bring
the irregular activities of LCC to the Government's attention.
Ayman Akshar, a former senior member of the LCC, is one of the
most prominent members of the anti-cult movement. He has spent
the past four years campaigning against the LCC's activities and
its recruitment techniques he told Sunday Business: "In
many cases this movement destroys and causes unbearable hardship
to many families, engages in brutal financial exploitation and
leaves many in need of psychological help, even after they have
left.
"If I had known my money was being used to bribe people then
I would have seriously objected. But no one within LCC is ever
allowed to really know what the money is being spent on. Only
a small group of very senior leaders are afforded that luxery."
Under LCC rules, all members must donate by direct debit 10% of
their gross annual salary to the organization. The LCC is effectively
the UK subsidiary of the Boston Church of Christ, headed by Los
Angeles-based Kip McKean. The church is estimated to have more
than 60,000 followers worldwide, raising #70m a year.
However, Akshar, who spent seven years as an LCC leader, is determined
to present enough evidence of wrongdoing by the group - whether
intentional or accidental - to the Home Secretary at the next
week's meeting.
"We have numerous examples that we will be citing,"
he added. "The Jakarta incident is just one of many. We
also have examples of other financial abuses involving Deed of
Covenants and housing benefit applications, not to mention many
instances of physical and mental abuse."
During the past five years the LCC has been the subject of a major
investigation by the Inland Revenue's Special Compliance Office,
which resulted in a #270,000 repayment to the tax authorities.
The Charities Commissioners, the regulatory body that monitors
all UK organizations that have been granted charitable status,
has also conducted a major 18-month inquiry, which concluded last
year, into the LCC's affairs.
In a letter written in February 1995, Phillipa holmes, an assistant
commissioner, admitted that the investigation had uncovered significant
flaws in the cult's affairs.
"Our inquiries into the London Church of Christ indicated
there were weaknesses in its financial controls, and funds collected
for specific purposes were not kept properly separated,"
she said.
"The London Church of Christ has acknowledged to us that
the trustees have not always exercised control to the degree they
should have done. The church has grown at a remarkable rate,
and the trustees are aware that they and their predecessors experienced
some difficulty in keeping pace."
Despite uncovering this, the Charities Commissioners has refused
to take action against the LCC. It is because of this decision
that Akshar, and his supporters, are determined to make the Government
see the light.
"We feel there is no desire on the part of the authorities
to get to the heart of the matter," said Akshar.
"After the meeting on Tuesday maybe there will be a reappraisal
of the situation so that justice, at long last, will be seen to
be done."