Matthew Ashimolowo

Matthew Ashimolowo (born 17 March 1952) is a Nigerian clergyman, the senior pastor of Kingsway International Christian Centre (KICC) in London.

Matthew Ashimolowo
Born (1952-03-17) 17 March 1952
Nigeria
OccupationSenior Pastor, Kingsway International Christian Centre (KICC)
Net worth$6-10 million (Forbes, 2011)

His Winning Ways programme is aired daily on Premier Radio (London) and Spirit FM (Amsterdam) and on television in Nigeria, Ghana, Zimbabwe, FaithAfrica (DSTV 341), the Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) and Europe on The God Channel and Inspirational Network.

Personal life

Ashimolowo converted to Christianity from Islam at the age of 20 after the death of his father before enrolling with a Bible school.[1]

Forbes estimated Ashimolowo's net worth is at between $6–10 million.[2] KICC annual accounts confirmed that he earns an annual salary of £100,000[3] but the majority of his wealth comes from the sale of Christian literature and documentaries from his media company, Matthew Ashimolowo media.[2] Ashimolowo is considered a preacher of the prosperity gospel.[4]

Financial irregularities

The charity behind Kingsway International Christian Centre is The King's Ministries Trust. This was investigated by the Charity Commission of England and Wales between 2002 and 2005. A report of the inquiry was released in October 2005.[5] The report concluded that there had been serious misconduct and mismanagement in the administration of the charity. At an early stage in the investigation, it was considered that the charity's assets were at risk, and control was removed from the existing trustees and placed in the hands of an independent external company (the accountancy and management consultancy practice KPMG), who regularised the charity's affairs.

The report found that:[5]

  • there was serious misconduct and mismanagement in the administration of the Charity (section 21)
  • he was responsible for approving payments and benefits to himself and his wife, Yemisi, totalling more than £384,000 (section 11)
  • he and his family received benefits from the Charity including:
    • free accommodation for himself and family (section 4)
    • an £80,000 car (section 12)
    • he had made personal purchases using the Charity's Visa card, including the purchase of a timeshare apartment in Florida for £13,000 (section 18)
  • over half a million pounds was paid out to Ashimolowo's private companies, which were operated from church property and had unclear business relationships with the charity (section 15)
  • Ashimolowo acted as both a trustee and a paid employee of the charity (section 4)

He was ordered (section 34) to repay £200,000.

In a subsequent debate in the House of Lords, Lord Swinfen questioned the Charity Commission's running of this investigation. He acknowledged the technical breach, but highlighted its openness, "This unincorporated trust has for some years been remunerating its trustees for various services and doing so quite openly. It made the mistake of not realising that it should have altered its constitution explicitly to allow that to be done." He then questioned the cost of the investigation "With some advice from the commission and the use of the charity lawyer, the trustees of this charity could have affected these changes for some £12,000—one-hundredth of the sum the commission has already spent." He added "The commission believes, understandably, that the future success of this charity is assured by the charity having new trustees".[6]

gollark: Yes, which is why I am working on changing some storage indexing handling.
gollark: It got rebooted somehow and did a lot of peripheral calls to index a bunch of storage. And it's off and TPS is fine now anyway.
gollark: The peripheral call issue was actually due to storage indexing.
gollark: Except possibly mine, though I don't think so.
gollark: Technically it was not through any claim.

References

  1. Nigerian pastor Ashimolowo: Zimbabwe has great future. Archived 2011-10-29 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Nsehe, Mfonobong (2011-06-07). "The Five Richest Pastors In Nigeria". blogs.forbes.com. Forbes. Retrieved 12 June 2011.
  3. Booth, Robert (11 April 2009). "Richer than St Paul's: church that attracts 8,000 congregation to a disused cinema". The Guardian. London.
  4. Petre, Jonathan (7 October 2005). "'Wealth' church leader practised what he preached". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  5. "The King's Ministries Trust (Registered Charity No. 1014084)". The Regulator for Charities in England and Wales. Retrieved 2008-10-24.
  6. "Lords Hansard text for 8 Nov 2005". UK Parliament. 2005-11-08. Retrieved 2009-02-21.
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