It was not an isolated incident. Similar videos on YouTube – all of which appear to expose Kenyan pastors in similar situations – have racked up hundreds of thousands of views.
In Githinji’s case, some are convinced that a team of people colluded in an attempt to entrap the pastor, and make money from the footage. “It was stage managed,” says Jackson Njeru, a prominent Kenyan blogger who created the controversial Facebook page Deadbeat Kenya. “When I watched the video, something was not adding up. The lady was smiling. She was laughing,” he tells BBC Trending. He believes the woman, her “husband” and the television crew were working in collaboration – one of a number of groups that deliberately target pastors and other powerful individuals.
Ruth Nesoba, a BBC journalist based in Kenya, says “apparently what is emerging is a clique of freelance cameramen who are going round looking for these kind of stories.”
News outlets pay good money for the footage, she adds, as the stories attract wide audiences. It isn’t yet clear whether Githinji’s encounter with the woman arose organically, or he was targeted in a sting operation. Either way, Nesoba thinks that for many Kenyans, it isn’t the most important question.
“People are asking: ‘Whether he was lured or not, what is a pastor doing in bed with his pants down with a woman who is not is wife?’ ” The Anglican Church in Kenya has now launched an official investigation.
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