
Father Edgars Kasongo, through his lawyers Vundhla-Phulu
and Partners, filed summons at the Bulawayo High Court citing the Anglican Diocese
of Matabeleland, its bishop and the Diocese of Province of Central Africa, as
defendants.
He wants a court order that compels the defendants to pay
him his salary arrears, outstanding fuel, airtime, chaplaincy and parochial
allowances.
Father Kasongo is also accusing the church of failing to
provide him with an official vehicle since his assumption of pastoral duties at
St Columba’s Parish in 2013. He is demanding $54 000 for allegedly using his
personal car on church business.
“The first defendant (Anglican Diocese of Matabeleland) has
failed and neglected to provide me with a vehicle for official pastoral duties
for a period of six years. I have been using my personal car and it has to date
travelled 54 000 km and I need $54 000 being the wear and tear costs calculated
at $1 per km,” he said.
Father Kasongo said he is also entitled to $14 500 being
outstanding salaries and allowances.
He said despite numerous demands, the church has failed,
refused or neglected to pay him his dues.
“The first defendant has failed and neglected to pay me my
outstanding basic salary calculated at a rate of $379 per month including
accumulated parochial, airtime and fuel allowances.
“The third defendant (Diocese of Province of Central
Africa) directed the first defendant to cease payment of my parochial
allowances. Further, the first defendant has failed and neglected to pay me $12
000 being my chaplaincy allowances from St Columba’s High School accumulated
over a period of four years,” he said.
The defendants are yet to respond to the summons.
In 2013, Father Kasongo made news headlines soon after his
appointment when he was locked in a nasty feud with church members who accused
him of making unnecessary changes in the church such as the submission of Lent
offering in unsealed envelopes.
The congregation argued that his changes were likely to
compromise the confidentiality of the Lent gift as people might refrain from
offering.
Father Kasongo allegedly introduced changes to the
processes and conduct of a number of church administrative and pastoral
activities, resulting in members of the congregation walking out in protest.
Congregants also accused Father Kasongo
of using authoritarian tendencies to run church meetings after dissolving the church council. Chronicle
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