Kenyan doomsday cult leader Paul Mackenzie charged with murdering 191 children

Prosecutors argue Mackenzie ordered his followers to starve themselves and their children to death so they could go to heaven before the world ended.

Paul Mackenzie appears in court on Wednesday
Image: Paul Mackenzie pictured in court last month. Pic: Reuters
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A Kenyan doomsday cult leader and 29 associates have been charged with the murder of 191 children.

Paul Mackenzie and his fellow defendants all denied the charges at a court in the coastal town of Malindi.

One suspect was found mentally unfit to stand trial.

Paul Mackenzie smiles in court where he was charged with killing 191 children
Image: Paul Mackenzie smiled in court when he appeared in January. Pic: Reuters

Prosecutors argue Mackenzie ordered his followers to starve themselves and their children to death so they could go to heaven before the world ended.

The children were among more than 429 bodies found over the course of months of exhumations across tens of thousands of acres of the Shakahola Forest in the coastal county of Kilifi.

The followers of Mackenzie's Good News International Church lived in several secluded settlements in an 800-acre area within the forest.

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Officers stand near where bodies are being exhumed. Pic: AP
Image: Officers stand near where bodies are being exhumed. Pic: AP
Police carrying the exhumed body of a victim. Pic: AP
Image: Police carrying the exhumed body of a victim. Pic: AP

Mackenzie was arrested in April last year and has already been charged with terrorism-related crimes, manslaughter and torture.

He was also convicted in December of producing and distributing films without a licence and sentenced to 12 months in jail.

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A former taxi driver, Mackenzie told cult members they could not send their children to school or go to hospital when they were ill, branding such institutions as Satanic, according to some of his followers.

His lawyer has said he is cooperating with the investigation into the deaths.

The 30 defendants are due back in court on 7 March for a bond hearing, the judge said.