Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party continues to be plagued by associations with the former Unification Church (UC), which, of course, was the main source of the resentments that allegedly led a man to assassinate former LDP president and prime minister Shinzo Abe in 2022. The South Korea-based church is officially known as the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification (FFWPU), a name change implemented in 1994. The FFWPU no longer wields the power it once did in Korea and its leader, Han Hak-ja, the wife of the late founder of the UC, Moon Sun-myung, is something of a pariah there. In Japan, a country that Moon supposedly despised and exploited accordingly, the former UC has always been a political and social force to reckon with, mainly by getting close to the LDP. Abe, in fact, inherited the group’s grip on his party from his grandfather, former prime minister Shinsuke Kishi, who first made friends with the church back in the 1960s.
The latest revelations, while reported to a certain extent by the Japanese press, were broken by the Korean newspaper Hankyoreh, which came into possession of “reports” written by Eiji Tokuno, the head of Japan operations of the FFWPU. These regular and detailed reports were directly sent to Han, referred to in the missives as True Mother, and describe Tokuno’s meetings with various LDP leaders, including Abe, over the years in a bid to reinforce the organization’s influence over the party by lending the LDP “support” for candidates in various general elections. NHK and Asahi Shimbun have said that the FFWPU will not confirm whether such reports exist and thus have offered no comment on what Hankyoreh and another Korean media outlet, Yonhap News Service, revealed in their reporting.
According to Yonhap, Tokuno reported to Han 220 times between 2018 and 2022, laying out how he and the church “supported” 290 LDP members as candidates in the 2021 Lower House general election, support that he said was successful and which was greatly appreciated by Abe and the rest of the LDP leadership. (It should be noted that the UC and FFWPU have been known to support candidates from other Japanese parties as well, as long as those candidates align ideologically with UC’s anti-communist, pro-family agenda.)
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