South Korea arrests Shincheonji church leader for meddling in politics, media report


FILE PHOTO: People watch a TV broadcasting a news report on a news conference held by Lee Man-hee, founder of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus the Temple of the Tabernacle of the Testimony, in Seoul, South Korea, March 2, 2020. REUTERS/Heo Ran/File Photo

SEOUL, June 25 (Reuters) - A ⁠South Korean court ordered the arrest of Lee Man-hee, the founder ⁠of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus, over allegations he orchestrated ‌an illegal scheme for followers to join a political party, news reports said.

Lee, 95, is accused of violating the Political Parties Act, which bans religious groups from involvement in ​politics, and obstruction, for directing tens of thousands ⁠of followers to join the ⁠conservative People Power Party ahead of major elections.

The court late on Wednesday ⁠cited ‌the risk of evidence destruction by Lee, according to reports. Officials at the Seoul Central District Court could not immediately be ⁠reached for comment early on Thursday.

In court earlier on ​Wednesday for a ‌warrant hearing, appearing frail and supported by aides, Lee did not ⁠answer questions ​about the charges against him.

Theself-proclaimed messiah Leefounded Shincheonji in the 1980s. Many mainstream Christian groups havedescribed it as a "brainwashing cult".

Investigators said more than 50,000 Shincheonji members ⁠were mobilised between 2021 and 2024 to support ​PPP candidates at the 2022 presidential and 2024 parliamentary nomination contests.

Lee, who has denied wrongdoing, is suspected of sitting at the apex of the operation, ⁠which authorities have described as a case of potential collusion between religion and politics.

Shincheonji was thrust into the spotlight during South Korea's 2020 COVID-19 outbreak, with more than half of early cases linked to its followers.

Lee ​was acquitted on charges of violating public health ⁠laws in 2021.

The case against Shincheonji is part of a wider probe ​into religious interference in politics, with prosecutors ‌also examining claims the Unification Church mobilised ​members to join the PPP and cultivated ties with politicians through donations.

(Reporting by Kyu-seok Shim, Jack Kim; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

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