The
investigation continues into the plane crash that killed Myles Munroe, an
influential and popular religious leader, and eight others in the Bahamas on
Sunday.
The
Jerusalem Post reports an official investigation into the crash continued on
Monday, with police having said that bad weather is suspected to have been a
factor.
“It
has left the country reeling,” said Bahamas Foreign Minister Fred Mitchell in a
statement. “Reverend Munroe was a giant of a Bahamian.”
Josh
Reinstein, the director of the Knesset Christian Allies Caucus, said Munroe was
a big supporter of Israel who came to the Jewish state twice a year.
“His
faith and love of Israel was an inspiration to us all,” Reinstein said. “Israel
had no better friend and the Knesset Christian Allies Caucus was honored to
work with him.”
The
Christian Embassy in Jerusalem said in a statement that “Myles Munroe was a key
leader of the global Evangelical movement with a big heart for Israel,” and
that “his tragic passing is a loss for Christians and for the Jewish people he
loved.”
Munroe’s
wife and top deputy were also among the casualties, authorities said.
The plane exploded on impact with a crane at the Grand Bahama Shipyard and plunged into a junkyard below, as it was making its landing approach for Grand Bahama in Freeport at about 5:10 p.m., roughly an hour after takeoff from Nassau, authorities said.
The plane exploded on impact with a crane at the Grand Bahama Shipyard and plunged into a junkyard below, as it was making its landing approach for Grand Bahama in Freeport at about 5:10 p.m., roughly an hour after takeoff from Nassau, authorities said.
Others
on board the plane included Bahamas Faith Ministries deputy Richard Pinder,
youth ministers Lavard and Rudel Parks, and their young son, Johannan.
None
aboard the plane survived the crash, officials said.
Among
those mourning Munroe, who in 1998 was the youngest recipient of the Order of
the British Empire, was Bahamian Prime Minister Perry Christie.
“It
is utterly impossible to measure the magnitude of Dr. Munroe’s loss to the
Bahamas and to the world,” Christie said. “He was indisputably one of the most
globally recognizable religious figures our nation has ever produced.”
The author of numerous
books and a regular traveller to countries in Africa and Latin America, Munroe
was also chief executive and chairman of the International Third World Leaders
Association.
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