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Despite Bans, U.S. Anti-LGBT Pastor Continues Pushing Into Africa

Despite being kicked out of Africa for his rhetoric, anti-LGBT pastor Steven Anderson is returning to the continent. And this time, he has help.


Steven Anderson.

Last fall, pastor Steven Anderson was banned from entering South Africa and deported from Botswana because of his anti-LGBT rhetoric, including of 49 LGBT as 鈥50 less pedophiles in the world鈥 and calling for the of LGBT people.

But Anderson is back in Africa, working with Oscar Bougardt, an anti-LGBT pastor, to open churches in Cape Town, South Africa, and with an American colleague and former member of Anderson鈥檚 congregation, Garrett Kirchway, .

Anderson reported in a December blog post that he received his . It鈥檚 unknown whether he will attempt to enter South Africa.

Anderson, of the Arizona-based anti-LGBT hate group Faithful Word Baptist Church, last Friday that Faithful Word was seeking workers in Malawi to help with a 鈥渟oul-winning marathon鈥 scheduled for April 30, the grand opening of the Faithful Word Baptist Church in Lilongwe. Kirchway will be the preacher at the Malawi branch.

Last week, the Mail & Guardian听 that the Rev. Oscar Bougardt, who was planning to host Anderson in South Africa before the country banned him, is now planning to open two churches in that country, with Anderson involved.

鈥淲e know that the government banned him,鈥 Bougardt told The Mail & Guardi,听鈥渂ut that is not going to stop us from having a church here in Cape Town.鈥

Bougardt in the U.S. for two weeks last November and announced he would be buying a building to establish a South African branch of Anderson鈥檚 Faithful Word Baptist Church.

Bougardt鈥檚 personal history of anti-LGBT extremism dates to 2011, when he stated that Archbishop Desmond Tutu would burn in hell for supporting the LGBT community. He also falsely claimed that most LGBT people are drug addicts and child molesters. He has also that LGBT people are 鈥渢o blame for all sex attacks on children, because people who kill and molest children have a homosexual background.鈥

In 2013, the South African Human Rights Commission sued Bougardt for hate speech following complaints about his vicioius anti-LGBT statements. In South Africa, complaints of hate speech are lodged with which are specifically designated to consider claims of discrimination, hate speech, or harassment. A settlement was reached in 2014, and听 under the terms of it, Bougardt is prohibited from publishing statements that are discriminatory or incite hatred or harm on the basis of sexual orientation, , an LGBT African news source.

Bougardt, however, seems to have ignored the case and the court order and continues to make inflammatory homophobic comments. In June 2015, Bougardt allegedly left a that LGBT people 鈥渂ehave worse than animals in bed and鈥elong in a cage.鈥 He also said that if he were president, he would 鈥渓ock them in cages where they belong.鈥

In a comment on another , he said, 鈥淲e need ISIS to come to countries who are homosexual friendly. ISIS. Please come rid South Africa of homosexual curse.鈥

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