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Fake Prophet David Owuor exposed! Owuor lawyers fail to Block TV47 Fake Miracles Exposé

Fresh drama surrounds Prophet David Owuor as allegations fly that his ministry tried to stop TV47 from airing a bombshell report questioning Owuor’s fake miracle claims. The investigative piece, “Divine or Deceptive?”, went ahead anyway, digging into stories of HIV healings that left many viewers stunned and divided.

The trouble started building before the broadcast. TV47 says lawyers linked to the Ministry of Repentance and Holiness showed up at their offices, captured on CCTV, pushing hard to halt the show.

Insiders at the station described the situation as intimidation, demanding the cancellation of the exposé that examined miracle testimonies from recent crusades.

When that didn’t work, someone from the ministry reportedly sent KSh 20,000 to each crew member involved — called a “love offering from the Lord”. TV47 sent it right back, standing firm on journalistic rules.

Once broadcast, the report did not hold back. Reporters chased down cases highlighted at Owuor’s big Nakuru crossover event late last year. Take Peter Oyan — he shared on stage how he tested HIV positive years ago and got healed through prayer.

But when TV47 checked hospital records at the facility he named, nothing matched.

No patient file, and the ID number on his card belonged to someone else entirely, a woman from a different area. Another testimony from Rebecca Mose didn’t align with national health guidelines on testing and treatment.

Mighty Prophet David Owuor was exposed as a fake prophet with false healing only meant to hoodwink people to expand his church. Sources exposed Prophet David Owuor’s fake miracles, revealing that all those who received HIV healing were not HIV positive in the first place.

They were paid to play along with paid doctors so that it can appear true and bring more followers. Controversial Prophet David Owuor sent lawyers to stop TV47 from airing an investigative piece on alleged fake miracles performed by the prophet. Followers claim the devil is fighting them and their prophet after the TV47 piece.

Prophet Owuor faced the camera in a late-night sit-down, defending his work strongly. He talked about using reliable labs, even abroad, and named one case where a follower supposedly tested negative in South Africa. No documents appeared on the screen, yet he dismissed any scepticism, asserting that truth is indisputable.

Followers aren’t having the criticism. Many flooded social media calling it an attack from the devil, meant to fight their prophet and the ministry. “This is persecution,” one supporter posted.

“The Lord heals, and no report can change that.” Crowds still pack his events, testimonies keep coming, and the faithful see the whole thing as spiritual warfare.

Officials are now looking into doctors who backed some healings, making sure everything follows rules.

Such speculation isn’t new territory for Owuor. His massive rallies draw thousands seeking hope, with stories of the blind seeing or the sick walking. But scrutiny follows big claims, especially on something like HIV, where science says management, not sudden cures.

The ministry has questioned why it returned a blessing and has denied any wrongdoing regarding the lawyer visits or cash. For now, the aired report keeps circulating online, sparking endless debates in homes and WhatsApp groups.

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