Nigerian pastor living in Britain unlawfully to be deported after ‘cult’ church is shut down over alleged £1.87m fraud
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A Nigerian pastor has lost his deportation battle – despite claiming it would breach his human rights – after his controversial church was shut down over an alleged £1.87 million fraud.
Tobi Adegboyega, 44, who is the cousin of Star Wars actor John Boyega, failed to convince an immigration tribunal that he should be allowed to remain in the UK.
The pastor headed SPAC Nation, a church that was closed down after investigations revealed it had failed to properly account for more than £1.87 million of outgoings.
Adegboyega has been living in Britain unlawfully since overstaying a visitor’s visa that allowed him to enter the country in 2005.
The case comes after his church was found to be operating with a lack of transparency, leading to its closure.
Adegboyega claimed deportation would breach his right to family life under the European Convention of Human Rights, having married a British woman.
His legal team portrayed him as a “charismatic” community leader who had helped hundreds of young people from London’s black communities.
The pastor claimed his work had been “lauded” by former Prime Minister Boris Johnson and senior Metropolitan Police figures, though no testimony from them was presented to the court.
He argued that projects he had masterminded in London would collapse without his presence.
The Home Office, however, contested that “all is not as it seems” with Adegboyega’s church activities.
Content retrieved from: https://www.gbnews.com/news/pastor-tobi-adegboyega-deportation-nation-church-cult-fraud.