Nolbert Kunonga | |
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Former Anglican Bishop (Excommunicated) of Harare and Mashonaland | |
Installed | October 24, 1997 |
Term ended | January, 2008 |
Predecessor | Peter Hatendi |
Successor | Sebastian Bakare |
Personal details | |
Born |
Southern Rhodesia |
31 December 1950
Nolbert Kunonga (born Southern Rhodesia, 31 December 1950) is the former Zimbabwean Anglican Bishop of Harare and Mashonaland.
Kunonga was criticised within and outside the Anglican Communion for his ardent support of Robert Mugabe, the President of Zimbabwe. This was at a time when other religious leaders in the country, notably the Roman Catholic archbishop, Pius Ncube, were condemning Mugabe's government for its human rights excesses across Zimbabwe.
Kunonga has been in and out of ecclesiastical courts since 2005. In 2008 he was officially excommunicated, stripping him of all recognition as a cleric within the global Anglican Communion. He has nevertheless continued as the head of a breakaway faction within Zimbabwe, apparently under the protection of President Mugabe, despite the defection of most of his flock and criticism from international church leaders.
A judge ordered in January 2008 that the breakaway Anglican province led by Kunonga must share the use of church buildings with the Anglican Church of the Province of Central Africa loyal to Bishop Sebastian Bakare.
In August 2011, the country's Chief Justice ruled that all Anglican property in the Harare diocese was under Kunonga's custody.
On 19 November 2012, the Zimbabwe Supreme Court Deputy Chief Justice, Luke Malaba, ruled that Kunonga and his followers were no longer part of the Church of the Province of Central Africa and that Kunonga will have to surrender everything that belongs to the church that is in his hands. He was also ordered to pay the costs of the civil appeal.