Authorities probe crash that killed Munroe

Pastor Myles Munroe preaches during an Oral Roberts University chapel service in Tulsa, Oklahoma. File picture: Oral Roberts University, via AP

Pastor Myles Munroe preaches during an Oral Roberts University chapel service in Tulsa, Oklahoma. File picture: Oral Roberts University, via AP

Published Nov 11, 2014

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Freeport, Bahamas -

Severe weather was likely a factor in the small plane crash that killed nine people, including a prominent Christian minister and his wife, on approach to the island of Grand Bahama, the foreign minister said on Monday.

Heavy rain was buffeting the region when the Lear 36 Executive Jet struck a shipping container crane in Freeport as it tried to land, Foreign Minister Fred Mitchell said.

Mitchell said that a commercial Bahamasair flight making the same route, from Nassau to Freeport, had turned back because it was unable to land around the same time as the flight carrying the Reverend Myles Munroe and several members of his Bahamas Faith Ministries.

Civil aviation authorities launched the investigation on Monday.

The death of Munroe, one of the most prominent pastors in predominantly Christian Bahamas, stunned the country.

“It is utterly impossible to measure the magnitude of Dr Munroe's loss to the Bahamas and to the world,” Prime Minister Perry Christie said.

“He was indisputably one of the most globally recognisable religious figures our nation has ever produced.”

Born in 1954 in the capital of Nassau, Munroe founded Bahamas Faith Ministries International in the early 1980s after studying at Oral Roberts University, a Christian liberal arts school in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The charismatic pastor quickly became an influential religious leader among many evangelical Christians, giving sermons around the world and occasionally appearing on televangelist Benny Hinn's popular programmes. He was also a motivational speaker and the author of numerous books, including the 2008 best-seller God's Big Idea: Reclaiming God's Original Purpose For Your Life.

As news of the plane crash spread, members of his church were shown weeping on a Bahamas TV station or raising their hands in prayer. Fellow Christian pastors expressed shock.

“At times like these, I don't try to figure things out, I just know that all things ultimately figure into a larger and higher purpose that we may never fully understand in this present limited reality,” Bishop Carlton Pearson, a high-profile US minister who was a friend of Munroe's for 40 years, wrote on his Facebook page.

Munroe, 60, and his entourage were travelling to Grand Bahama to attend the 2014 Global Leadership Forum that he organised. He planned to have dinner in Freeport about 90 minutes after his plane's scheduled landing with former UN ambassador Andrew Young, a speaker at the event, Mitchell said.

Munroe's wife, Ruth, was also on the plane, along with the man the pastor considered second-in-command at Bahamas Faith Ministries, Richard Pinder. The group's youth minister and his wife and child were also aboard.

Munroe, who grew up poor in the Bahamas, was considered an inspiration for many people in the island chain and abroad, the foreign minister said.

“He has really put his name on the world stage and helped the Bahamas achieve recognition for talent,” the foreign minister said. - Sapa-AP

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