Legal claim from Zimbabwean victims of John Smyth

The law firm Leigh Day has been instructed by seven Zimbabwean victims of John Smyth to bring a legal claim against the Church of England, alleging that senior clergy and church officers orchestrated a cover-up that enabled Smyth to continue abusing boys for decades. An extract of the Press Release is reproduced below.


Press Release

Zimbabwean victims of sadistic sexual abuser John Smyth bring legal claim against Church of England

Seven Zimbabwean victims of sadistic sexual abuser John Smyth have instructed law firm Leigh Day to bring a legal claim against the Church of England, alleging that senior clergy and church officers orchestrated a cover-up that enabled Smyth to continue abusing boys for decades.

Posted on 04 October 2025

The claim traces a direct line from the church’s failure to act in the early 1980s to the abuse that later occurred in Zimbabwe.

The claimants include six men who were abused as teenagers at Christian holiday camps run by Smyth in Zimbabwe, and the mother of Guide Nyachuru, a 16-year-old boy whose body was found in a swimming pool at one of Smyth’s camps in 1992.

A letter of claim sent on behalf of the seven by Leigh Day asserts that the Church of England’s failure to report Smyth’s abuse in the UK between 1982 and 1984 directly led to his relocation to Zimbabwe, where he continued to prey on vulnerable boys. The abuse included forced nudity, beatings with table tennis and jokari bats, indecent exposure, groping and intrusive conversations about masturbation.

[…]

An internal investigation acknowledged the criminality of the beatings, yet the police were not told. Instead, Smyth was encouraged to leave the country. Following discussions among senior clergy, Smyth moved to Zimbabwe and set up the Zambesi Trust UK which funded his work and expenses. The trust’s Council of Reference included prominent conservative evangelicals. The funding from the trust enabled Smyth to host the Christian camps where the abuse took place.

Leigh Day’s letter of claim has been sent to St Andrew the Great church (formerly the Round Church, Cambridge), which employed the late Reverend Mark Ruston, who led the internal investigation into Smyth’s abuse in 1982. The claim alleges that Mr Ruston, alongside other clergy and senior church officers from other parishes, deliberately concealed the abuse and failed to report it to the police, despite acknowledging that crimes had been committed.

It states that the failure to report Smyth to the authorities appears to have been motivated by a desire to protect the reputation of the Church of England – particularly among senior figures in its conservative evangelical wing.

The Makin Review, commissioned by the Church of England and published in 2024, concluded that in 1982 the Church of England had actively covered up Smyth’s abuse and considered him “a problem solved and exported to Africa”.  The Archbishop of Canterbury resigned following its publication, and disciplinary proceedings have been initiated against several clergy.

The letter of claim states: “In orchestrating this cover up, Ruston and the other Church of England church officers and clergy who covered up Smyth’s abuse knowingly enabled him to continue to have access to and be involved with vulnerable boys, and their care, including our clients. But for the breaches our clients would not have been abused by Smyth and would not have suffered the harm detailed.”

[…]

The claimants are seeking a full apology and a full independent review into learning from the abuses perpetrated by Smyth in Zimbabwe and South Africa, as well as financial compensation.

The seven claimants are represented by Leigh Day international team solicitor Rebekah Read.

Rebekah Read said: 

“This case is about accountability. The Church of England had multiple opportunities to stop John Smyth and protect vulnerable boys. Instead, it chose to protect its reputation and take control of sweeping this horrific abuse under the carpet. Our clients are seeking justice not only for themselves, but to ensure that such failures are never repeated.

“The claimants hope that the current leadership transition in the Church of England will signal a renewed commitment to transparency, accountability, and justice for survivors.”


Cite this article as: David Pocklington, "Legal claim from Zimbabwean victims of John Smyth" in Law & Religion UK, 7 October 2025, https://lawandreligionuk.com/2025/10/07/legal-claim-from-zimbabwean-victims-of-john-smyth/

2 thoughts on “Legal claim from Zimbabwean victims of John Smyth

  1. I recall a judicial aphorism from long, long ago: “The law is not concerned with the causes of causes”.

  2. Pingback: Zimbabwean victims of legal claim – further comments | Law & Religion UK

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