Japan orders ‘Moonies’ church to be stripped of legal recognition

Japan orders ‘Moonies’ church to be stripped of legal recognition

The move comes in the wake of the 2022 assassination of ex-prime minister Shinzo Abe.

Unification Church EPA 250325
The Unification Church is accused of pressuring followers into making life-ruining donations. (EPA Images pic)
TOKYO:
A Japanese court ordered today that the religious sect the Unification Church be stripped of official recognition, the government said, in the wake of the 2022 assassination of ex-prime minister Shinzo Abe.

An education ministry spokesman told AFP that the Tokyo district court “issued the dissolution order” for the Japanese chapter of the Unification Church, founded in South Korea and nicknamed the “Moonies” after its late founder, Sun Myung-moon.

Former prime minister Abe – Japan’s longest-serving leader – was shot dead on the campaign trail in 2022, allegedly by a man who resented the Unification Church.

The assassin was reportedly angry that his mother had donated some ¥100 million to the church.

Investigations after Abe’s murder revealed close ties between the sect and many conservative ruling-party lawmakers, leading to the resignation of four ministers.

The church is accused of pressuring followers into making life-ruining donations, and blamed for child neglect among its members – although it has denied any wrongdoing.

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