CHRISTIAN ABURIME
In a dramatic legal and religious reckoning that is gaining deserved public attention, the Anambra State Governor, Professor Chukwuma Charles Soludo, CFR, has set a precedent as the first state governor in the country to arraign eight self-styled pastors at once over the orchestration of ‘arrangee’ miracles, which are staged divine interventions designed to defraud people. According to the charges, the pastors were hiring paid actors to perform fake miracles on them
The landmark legal action, spearheaded by the State’s Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Tobechukwu Nweke, SAN, marks a bold assertion of state authority over what critics have long described as a rampant industry of spiritual deception.
The eight accused clerics, including *Ndubisi Nnachukwu* of Omega Dominion Ministry, *Ekeleme Chris Ugochukwu* of Cloud of Glory Prophetic Ministry, *Bishop Emeka Nwamkpa* of Chapel of Faith Ministry, *Peter Chukwu* of Messiah Adoration Ministry, *Chinedu Egwuonwu* of Citadel of Grace Ministry, *Ebele Nnachukwu* of Jehovah the Mighty Than All Ministry, *Miracle Iruoma* of City of Power Ministry, and *Chukwukadibia Ogwuama* of Land of Testimony Adoration Ministry, were remanded in prison custody after their arraignment before the Anambra State High Court, with proceedings adjourned to June 15, 2026, for bail motions and further hearing.

The charges against the pastors invoke two potent legal instruments: Sections 18(3) and 19(1) of the Anambra State Homeland Security Law, 2025, which criminalise the misuse of places of worship for illicit activities and for public deception, and Section 3(1) of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud-Related Offences Act (LFN 2006), commonly known as the 419 law. Together, these statutes paint a picture of spiritual charlatanism and organised financial fraud cloaked in religious garb.
What makes this case particularly explosive is the prosecution’s reliance on video-recorded confessions, reportedly extracted from the pastors themselves, which Nweke confirmed during a press briefing. According to the Attorney General, a flash drive containing these statements was frontloaded as part of the evidence to be relied upon, underscoring the state’s intent to rely heavily on the admissions of guilt.

Some of the defendants are also facing charges alongside alleged agents tasked with recruiting the so-called “healed” or “delivered” individuals, actors paid to perform miraculous recoveries on camera for social media virality and congregation awe.
“This is not just about stopping fraud,” Nweke declared. “It is about protecting vulnerable citizens from being exploited by those who weaponise faith for profit. Just as we prosecute native doctors peddling false, magical solutions, so too shall we hold accountable those staging fake miracles.”
All eight accused ministers were alleged to have extorted followers under the pretense of divine healing and deliverance, often broadcasting these staged events online to attract more financial gains and new converts.

Legal analysts say the latest move by the Soludo government could set a national precedent. While other states have occasionally targeted fraudulent religious figures, no sitting governor in Nigeria has gone as far as to publicly charge pastors for the performance of fake “arrangee” miracles.
Supporters of the crackdown argue it addresses a growing crisis of trust in Nigeria’s megachurches, where millions are drawn annually into what some describe as “faith capitalism”, a system in which divine promises are monetised with theatrical flair.
Can this legal offensive signal a broader shift in how Nigeria governs the intersection of faith, finance, and public order?
For now, one thing is certain: Anambra State Governor Chukwuma Charles Soludo has boldly taken the right step towards stemming religious fraud in Anambra, and there may be no more hiding place for fake or fraudulent religious pastors in the state.



