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Fugitive Filipino preacher accused of sexual abuse charges has been arrested  


FILE - Apollo Carreon Quiboloy appears on his talk show on May 23, 2016, in Davao City, southern Philippines. He is accused of sexual abuse and human trafficking in the Philippines and similar charges in the United States.
FILE - Apollo Carreon Quiboloy appears on his talk show on May 23, 2016, in Davao City, southern Philippines. He is accused of sexual abuse and human trafficking in the Philippines and similar charges in the United States.

A Filipino preacher accused of sexual abuse and human trafficking in the Philippines and similar charges in the United States has been captured, officials said Sunday.

Interior Secretary Benhur Abalos announced the arrest of Apollo Quiboloy in a brief statement on his Facebook account but did not provide other details. Philippine police chief Gen. Rommel Francisco Marbil confirmed Quiboloy’s arrest without elaborating.

Quiboloy went into hiding after a Philippine court ordered his arrest and several others on suspicion of child and sexual abuse. The Philippine Senate has separately ordered Quiboloy’s arrest for refusing to appear in committee hearings that were looking into criminal allegations against him.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has urged Quiboloy to surrender and assured him of fair treatment by authorities.

The preacher and his lawyer have denied the allegations against him, saying they were fabricated by critics and former members who were removed from the religious group.

In 2021, United States federal prosecutors announced the indictment of Quiboloy for allegedly having sex with women and underage girls who faced threats of abuse and “eternal damnation” unless they catered to the self-proclaimed “son of God.”

Quiboloy and two of his top administrators were among nine people named in a superseding indictment returned by a federal grand jury and unsealed in November 2021. It contained a raft of charges, including conspiracy, sex trafficking of children, sex trafficking by force, fraud and coercion, marriage fraud, money laundering, cash smuggling and visa fraud.

The U.S. Embassy in Manila referred requests for comments to Philippine authorities.

In August, about 2,000 police backed by riot squads raided a vast religious compound of Quiboloy’s group, called the Kingdom of Jesus Christ, in southern Davao city. The police brought equipment that could detect people hiding in underground tunnels but did not find him in the 30-hectare (75-acre) compound that includes a cathedral, a stadium, a school, a residential area, a hangar and a taxiway leading to Davao International Airport.

In 2019, Quiboloy claimed he stopped a major earthquake from hitting the southern Philippines.

He was also a close supporter and spiritual adviser of former President Rodrigo Duterte, who is being investigated by the International Criminal Court in connection with the extrajudicial killings by police of thousands of drug suspects.

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