
The Monarch Report
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Former U.S. Ambassador Morse Tan's legal team spoke to press in Seoul on June 11. Attorneys filed a recusal motion and a complaint with South Korea's top prosecutors, alleging abuse of authority. "Judicial violence operating in the interests of Lee Jae-myung." "It damages the ROK-US alliance and South Korea's national interests." A reporter asked whether there is evidence of Lee Jae-myung's juvenile detention. His attorneys responded: that question is for Lee himself to answer. "The public wants answers about Lee's juvenile detention and a 1978 incident. Lee Jae-myung, as head of state, has an obligation to answer. Shifting that burden to the public is not right." Morse H. Tan
The Monarch Report20,919 просмотров • 3 дней назад

Former U.S. ambassador Morse Tan was barred from leaving South Korea. No written notice. Not to him. Not to his lawyers. There's a treaty for this. There's Interpol. A phone call would have done it. Instead, police slipped past his waiting lawyers to reach him in secret. And the case? One the police had already thrown out. The minister ordered it reopened. His lawyer's verdict: an overreach, and a diplomatic disaster.
The Monarch Report27,723 просмотров • 5 дней назад

韓国の20,30代が中心となって「再選挙!」と繰り返し叫んでいる 暴力なしで平和に民主主義を守り抜こうと 鼓舞し合いながら訴えている 昼から今の時間も続けて 彼らの声は必ず天に届いています
The Monarch Report19,435 просмотров • 9 дней назад

What's happening in South Korea right now? On June 3, election day, ballot shortages occurred at around 50 locations nationwide. Citizens formed human chains to defend the ballot boxes, leading to a standoff that lasted more than 35 hours. On the morning of June 5, approximately 1,000 police officers were deployed to the Jamsil polling station. In the midst of the intense situation, a 21-year-old man who was protecting the ballot box collapsed and had to be rushed to the hospital in a coma by ambulance. This video shows the moment police tried to open the entrance by removing citizens who were blocking it. The ballot boxes were eventually removed, but the protests didn’t end. Citizens moved to the counting centers, where they continue to demand a new election.
The Monarch Report14,997 просмотров • 9 дней назад

A sitting Japanese senator just asked the question nobody in mainstream media will touch. Kitamura Haruo is a veteran lawyer, elected to Japan's upper house in July 2025 with nearly a million votes. He's raising a simple question about the Unification Church dissolution order: Was this really about the law? Or about politics? He said : "The attacks on the Unification Church were so extreme in some quarters that I thought something was off." His explanation: The church's political arm, the International Federation for Victory over Communism, was actively pushing for a spy prevention law in Japan. Japan remains the only G7 nation without a dedicated law to punish espionage. Left-wing groups saw this as a direct threat. "When they were pushing hard for a spy prevention law, left-wing activists realized their position would be in danger and made them their target. If a spy prevention law passed, it would be a serious problem for them. So the strategy became: crush the Unification Church to weaken the International Federation for Victory over Communism." "Is it really safe to go ahead with a dissolution order like this? When you look at the balance with other religious groups, and the relationship to religious freedom... is this really okay? I honestly have questions," he says. Tokyo High Court rules on the appeal March 4. Two weeks from now. This is the first dissolution order in Japanese history based on civil complaints alone. No criminal charges. No leader arrested. The precedent it sets will reach far beyond one church. Sources : 1. Bitter Winter - "Behind the Dissolution of the Unification Church: Japan's Communist Party, North Korea, and China" (May 6, 2025) 2. Bitter Winter - "Japan, Misunderstanding the Unification Church: An Interview with Masumi Fukuda" (Jan 2026)
The Monarch Report134,908 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад

家庭連合(旧統一教会)信者が語る ── 数十年にわたる拉致監禁、強制的な脱会説得、そして相次ぐ教会の解散 日本では数十年にわたり、世界平和統一家庭連合(統一教会)をめぐる激しい論争が続いてきた。2022年の安倍晋三元首相暗殺事件以降、その論争はいっそう激化している。これにより、多数の訴訟、否定的な報道、政府による圧力が広がり、その結果として数多くの教会が裁判所の命令によって解散させられ、宗教活動も厳しく制限される事態に至っている。 ある二世信者が、個人と共同体が受けてきた苦しみについて、率直に語った ── 反統一教会勢力が行ってきた拉致監禁と強制的な脱会説得、社会的な排斥、信徒という理由だけで解雇される状況。そして解散命令の直後、清算人によって突如教会は閉鎖された。信徒たちは今や礼拝も、結婚式も、葬儀も、基本的な共同体としての活動さえ行えなくなっていると、彼は語る。 問われているのは、基本的人権としての信教の自由そのものである。一つの宗教共同体が組織的に差別され、その家族が引き裂かれ、その活動の場が閉ざされるとき、それは民主主義社会における寛容のあり方と、少数派の権利の保護について、深刻な問いを投げかける。世論が紛糾するなか、政府は宗教団体に対して強い措置を取るべきなのか。それとも、世論の動向にかかわらず、信仰の自由を守る厳格な歯止めを維持すべきなのか。
The Monarch Report15,377 просмотров • 17 дней назад

最高裁を担当する沖野裁判官への忌避申立て記者会見 【家庭連合代理人・中村達樹弁護士の発言要点】 刑事と異なり、民事の判断は裁判官や弁護士によって変わり得る。 2024年3月、全国弁連の弁護士・郷路征記氏が、家庭連合を被告とする民事訴訟で敗訴した。 その4か月後の7月、沖野判事は当時教授として日弁連セミナーで基調講演を担当。 同教団に対し、郷路弁護士や全国弁連の主張に沿う批判的発言をしていた。 東大教授という中立性が求められる立場で、敗訴した弁護士の主張に沿う見解を公の場で表明したことになる。 そして今、最高裁で本件を担当している。 地裁、高裁と審級が上がるにつれて国民は信頼を求める。 当事者である信者は、結果がどうであれ 判断に納得したいが、今の状況では、納得できる判決は期待できない。 中村弁護士はそう指摘した。 Full Video
The Monarch Report14,681 просмотров • 19 дней назад

Hillhouse Capital, a firm with strong Chinese ties through its founder Zhang Lei, is on the verge of acquiring IGIS Asset Management, South Korea’s largest real estate fund manager handling $52 billion in assets. IGIS oversees public pension funds and holds sensitive data on major infrastructure and property holdings across the country. The deal has drawn attention after Korean insurers, including Hyeungkuk Life, submitted higher bids but were sidelined following additional bidding rounds conducted by Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs. The transaction raises important questions about foreign influence over critical domestic assets. South Korea’s real estate and pension system are vital to national economic stability and retirement security for millions of citizens. When a major fund with links to a geopolitical rival gains control of such assets, it touches on broader concerns regarding economic sovereignty and the protection of public funds. In an era of increasing cross-border investment and geopolitical tension, how nations safeguard strategic domestic assets directly affects public trust and long-term economic independence. Do you believe foreign acquisitions of key financial institutions like IGIS should face stricter national security reviews, or should market principles take priority?
The Monarch Report37,263 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

Trump just nominated a former member of the House Select Committee on the CCP as U.S. Ambassador to South Korea. On April 13, the White House announced Michelle Steel Michelle Steel as its pick for Seoul. She was born in Seoul. Her parents fled North Korea. And now she's heading back as America's top diplomat in a country increasingly exposed to CCP influence. This is her record in her own words, from a House committee hearing on China: "The threat of the CCP is not a partisan issue. It is the greatest single threat facing the American people and democracy around the world." Steel introduced legislation to revoke China's developing-country status. She called it what it is: absurd. The Lee Jae-myung administration has been deepening ties with Beijing. But if Steel is confirmed, South Korea will be receiving an ambassador whose family fled communist rule, and who spent four years in Congress treating the CCP threat as the defining issue of her career. Senate confirmation is still required. Her words to Congress, though, are already on the record. "I'm hopeful that we can come together to find real solutions to stop the CCP's advance, stand with our allies, and protect our national security." If confirmed, she takes that fight to Seoul. Sources: Stars and Stripes LegiStorm — "Steel Participates in First Hearing on the CCP's Threat to America"
The Monarch Report30,252 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

82-year-old religious leader Dr. Hak Ja Han is fighting for her life in a freezing South Korean cell after 21 days of detention. Legally blind. Diabetic. Recent heart surgery. Forced to sleep on the floor in a 6-meter cell with no heat, no chairs, no bed. 25 hours of interrogation by the same investigators who drove someone to suicide. Her family warns of imminent health collapse. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich calls for global intervention. South Korea's "democracy" is torturing an elderly great-grandmother. Where's the outrage? #ReleaseTheMotherOfPeace
The Monarch Report89,325 просмотров • 8 месяцев назад

元米国下院議員ダン・バートン氏が警告 「韓国の大統領と政府よ、今すぐ韓鶴子総裁を釈放しなさい。さもなければ、我々は韓国に対して別のアプローチを取らざるを得なくなるだろう。」 バートン元議員は国際宗教自由サミット(IRF Summit)で、韓国の大統領と政府に向けて直接的なメッセージを発した。 「今あなた方が韓鶴子総裁にしていることほど、ひどいことはこの世にありません。彼女は釈放されるべきです。」 「これは宗教の自由に関する問題です。あなた方は今すぐ対処しなければなりません。」 そして彼はこれを同盟の問題へと格上げした。 「あなた方はアメリカの同盟国だと言っています。ならば信じなければなりません。そして我々が信じるように、宗教の自由を信じるべきです。それはアメリカ合衆国憲法修正第1条です。」 「もしそれを信じないのであれば、我々は韓国政府に対して別のアプローチを取らざるを得なくなるでしょう。」 アメリカは韓国政府に何度も警告を送った。 同盟は言葉ではなく行動で証明するものではないだろうか。 家庭連合の韓総裁は、83歳の年齢で、物的証拠が見つからないまま143日間拘束されていた。 ほぼ目が見えず、骨盤や腰、膝の悪化を抱え、床を這うしかない状況の中、転倒を繰り返した。 143日目になり、療養治療のため一時拘束停止が許可され、21日まで療養している。 この警告に韓国政府はどう対処するだろうか。
The Monarch Report48,590 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад

U.S. President Donald Trump has reportedly sent a down-filled parka to former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, currently detained pending trial over the 2024 martial law declaration. The gift, delivered amid Yoon's ongoing legal battles and harsh winter conditions, has been interpreted by supporters as a message of solidarity from Trump, who has previously praised Yoon's leadership. Rumors suggest Trump intended Yoon to wear it as a reminder of ongoing support. The gesture comes at a time of deep political division in South Korea, where Yoon's brief imposition of emergency rule led to his impeachment, removal, and multiple charges including insurrection. While many view his actions as unconstitutional, a segment of conservatives and international allies see him as a defender of democratic order against perceived threats. Trump's personal outreach highlights the enduring personal and ideological ties between the two leaders. Such symbolic acts are noteworthy because they reflect how global leaders signal alignment in politically charged cases, influencing perceptions of international support and the morale of those facing legal and political isolation. When a former U.S. president sends a winter coat to a jailed ally, is it just a human gesture… or a quiet geopolitical signal in a war of narratives?
The Monarch Report54,715 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад

Buddhist community's shocking declaration: "Korea will soon be destroyed." They compare current leaders to Hitler and Stalin, warn of "opening all doors to North Korea," accuse judiciary of discrimination, media of bias. "The negative election will lead to the destruction of free Korea." When Buddhist monks break their silence, the crisis is real. #SouthKorea #Buddhism #Democracy #Warning #Politics #ReligiousFreedom #Crisis #FreeSpeech
The Monarch Report79,728 просмотров • 8 месяцев назад

To understand the dissolution of the Family Federation in Japan, you need to know about the kidnapping and forced confinement cases. Pastors of the United Church of Christ in Japan were involved in abducting and confining Family Federation members to force them to leave their faith. They spoke about this during their own worship services. Confinement was the first step in a coordinated process: - Left-wing lawyers referred families to specialist pastors - Believers were held until they renounced their faith - Release required filing a civil lawsuit against the Church - Those lawsuits became the state's evidence Behind the scheme was the National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales, founded by attorneys with close ties to left-wing political parties. According to submissions by legal researcher Patricia Duval to the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion, at a 1991 meeting, network lawyers and pastors publicly declared a shared goal: eliminate the Family Federation by accumulating civil damages cases. Lawyers pushed former members to sue the Church as proof of their apostasy. Japan's government then used those civil judgments as the basis to file for dissolution. The evidence base is lawsuits filed by people who had no choice but to file them to get out. Sources: Bitter Winter / Patricia Duval - "The Duval Report. 1. Organized Tort Cases" - September 26, 2024 Bitter Winter - "Japan: Lawyers, Deprogramming...Executive Summary" - June 21, 2025
The Monarch Report28,425 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

“When I saw her, I was really surprised. She was shining… She said to me, ‘No, don’t worry about me. The Creator is watching over me.’” – Prophet Uzwi-Lezwe Radebe Today, Nov 4, 2025, the revered South African spiritual leader—founder of The Revelation Spiritual Home, drawing millions—flew 16+ hours with his wife, leaving conferences & their 3 school-age children behind, to visit Holy Mother Han, Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon at Seoul Detention Center. After 42 days of unjust detention, he found her radiant at 82, more concerned for him than herself. He prayed with the members of Family Federation of World Peace & Unification, urged all faith leaders to stand strong, & declared: “When she comes out, we will emerge stronger—much stronger than before.” Interfaith love in action.
The Monarch Report59,870 просмотров • 7 месяцев назад

The international press isn't covering this. Dr. Jan Figel, the European Union's former Special Envoy for Religious Freedom, has formally nominated Dr. Hak Ja Han of the Family Federation for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize — while she sits in a South Korean detention cell. His nomination cites six grounds: thousands of interfaith peace ambassadors deployed globally, Korean reunification summits, the Sunhak Peace Prize, UN ECOSOC consultative status, a proposed DMZ International Peace Park, and cultural diplomacy through the Little Angels Troop. Figel wrote that many international observers regard her detention as politically motivated, aimed at silencing her global peace work. US Vice President JD Vance also raised her case directly with South Korea's Prime Minister in official bilateral talks. When an EU diplomat files a Nobel nomination and a sitting US Vice President flags a detention in official talks, the story is bigger than one courtroom. What does it take for a story this significant to reach the headlines?
The Monarch Report22,027 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

South Korea recently arrested its Broadcasting Commission chairperson in what critics call a communist-style purge of conservatives. They're using Mao's exact playbook from the 1950s. Same tactics. Same targets: media leaders, religious figures, anyone opposing leftist control. An 82-year-old religious leader known as "Mother of Peace" now faces persecution.This isn't isolated. It's China's soft power push testing the same censorship tactics we're seeing here. #unificationchurch #FreeTheMotherOfPeace
The Monarch Report52,910 просмотров • 8 месяцев назад

South Korea is facing sharp increases in fuel prices amid global energy volatility and regional tensions. President Lee Jae-myung has proposed two direct interventions: a government-imposed maximum price system on fuel and a vehicle rotation system that would restrict driving on certain days based on the last digit of a license plate. These measures aim to reduce consumption and stabilize costs but would significantly limit individual movement and market pricing mechanisms. Lee has so far resisted calls for a broad fuel tax cut, which remains one of the public’s most requested relief measures. The proposals arrive at a time when household budgets are strained, transportation costs affect daily life, and public frustration with inflation is mounting. Past attempts at price controls and rationing in various countries have often led to shortages, black markets, or unintended economic distortions. In South Korea, where car ownership is widespread and personal mobility is essential, any policy that curbs driving rights or overrides market prices carries immediate social and economic weight. When a president floats ideas that directly restrict personal freedoms and economic choice to address a cost-of-living crisis, citizens need to understand the trade-offs involved. These are not abstract policy options—they would touch everyday routines, commuting, and family life. Do you think restricting driving days and capping fuel prices would effectively ease the burden on households, or would it create more problems than it solves?
The Monarch Report21,897 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

Chinese authorities carried out a large-scale pre-dawn raid on Yayang Church in Wenzhou — long known as “China’s Jerusalem” for its historic and vibrant Christian community. Over 200 believers were detained during a prayer vigil, with police using signal jamming, confiscating phones, and reportedly placing black hoods on members. As of mid-March, 22 people remain missing without formal charges, legal documents, or information provided to their families. Bulldozers later removed the church’s bell tower and cross after the congregation refused to install Communist Party surveillance cameras and hang the national flag inside the sanctuary. The operation falls under a national campaign called “Five Entries, Five Transformations,” designed to place all houses of worship under direct Communist Party control. Wenzhou’s Christian community has long symbolized faith resilience in China, making this incident particularly significant. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has described China’s record on religious freedom as among the worst in the world, and the U.S. Congress is considering targeted sanctions on officials responsible for such persecution. When a major religious community faces coordinated state action, including prolonged detention without transparency, it raises fundamental questions about religious freedom and the rule of law in China. International awareness matters because these events test the global commitment to protecting freedom of belief, even in authoritarian contexts. Do you believe the international community should apply stronger pressure on China regarding religious persecution, or is this an internal matter best left to Chinese authorities?
The Monarch Report19,097 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

In late November 2025, a South Korean news outlet published an investigative piece questioning the full cost of President Lee Jae-myung’s recent overseas trip. Within hours, the Presidential Office contacted the newsroom twice—first requesting ten specific edits, then demanding the entire article be removed. The outlet complied and took the story down, sparking immediate backlash from journalists and opposition figures who called it a blatant violation of press freedom in a country whose constitution explicitly protects it. This incident follows a pattern of growing tension between the current administration and critical media since Lee took office in June 2025, with previous complaints about selective access, defamation lawsuits, and perceived pressure on broadcasters. It’s a red flag for society because when a president’s office can pick up the phone and make unfavorable reporting disappear, the public loses its most important check on power—and the line between democracy and controlled narrative starts to blur. If the Presidential Office can force a newsroom to delete a legitimate story with one phone call, who decides what the public is allowed to know next? #PressFreedom #LeeJaeMyung #KoreanMedia #DemocracyWatch
The Monarch Report42,191 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад