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Congregants experiencing health issues after being sprayed with insecticide by South African prophet

20-year-old Thabiso Chabalala on Wednesday, told the court that she spent seven months coughing and with swollen eyes after Prophet Lethebo Rabalago sprayed her with insecticide.

 

Prophet Rabalago from the Mountzion General Assembly in Limpopo, South Africa, who has styled himself as a prophet, was charged with five counts of assault and contravening environmental laws after images of him spraying congregants with Doom went viral in November last year.

 

December 12 2017
Thabiso Chabalala,20, testifying on Prophet of Doom case, Lethebo Rabalago, at Mookgopong Magistrates Court in Limpopo . PHOTO: ANTONIO MUCHAVE/SOWETAN

 

Photos: Congregants experiencing health issues after being sprayed with insecticide by South African prophet.

 

Chabalala (pictured) testified in the ongoing trial against Lethebo Rabalago at the Mookgophong Magistrates Court on Wednesday.

 

This is Rabalago’s second legal battle after the provincial health department obtained an interdict in the Limpopo High Court against him in May.

 

Chabalala told the court that she regretted allowing Rabalago to spray the pesticide on her. She said she responded to calls for the sick to come forward during a church service at Phomolong township last year.

 

Presiding magistrate Frans Mahodi asked Chabalala how she felt when she saw Rabalago holding the insecticide can.

 

“I was taken by surprise. I thought that was how God instructed him to conduct the healing,” she responded.

Chabalala said she was sprayed with Doom twice on the same day and became dizzy. She said at first she thought the dizziness was part of the healing process, but she started experiencing health problems later on.

 

“I regret it,” she said.

The state had also called a Grade 11 pupil who claimed he had to get help from a clinic after Rabalago sprayed him.

 

The 17-year-old said he had gone to the church to seek prayers because his neck was painful. Rabalago’s defence lawyer, Edmond Lubisi, said his client had never met the teenager.

 

“It is my client’s version that he does not know you or remember seeing you at his church,” Lubisi said.
Earlier, Catherine Mabitsela, a legislation chief inspector at the provincial department of agriculture, testified that Rabalago’s practices were misleading.

 

Mabitsela said Rabalago had not used the product according to regulations.

 

In an interview with eNCA.com last November, Rabalago claims that the insect killer is to heal people with cancer, HIV or any other illness.

 

On whether he considers the danger of the chemical spray to the eyes and other body parts, he said:

“With us, we believe in God is for all things. People are getting their deliverance.”

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