25.10.25

Will South Korea Release the 83-Year-Old Mother of Peace or Invite Eternal Cosmic Indemnity and Global ...?

For Immediate Release 🔥 URGENT GLOBAL EMERGENCY PRESS RELEASE AND OPEN LETTER 🔥 October 26, 2025 | Seoul, Republic of Korea

Your Excellency President Lee Jae-myung, Honorable Citizens of the Republic of Korea, and Fellow Global Citizens,

We stand at an unprecedented, fateful crossroads in human history—a defining juncture where the choices made today will irrevocably etch the moral, spiritual, economic, diplomatic, and geopolitical legacy of South Korea and the world for centuries to come. Echoing the profound biblical indemnity endured by the ancient Israelites for two millennia—marked by exile, suffering, dispersion, and unimaginable hardships due to their rejection and crucifixion of Jesus Christ, the Only Begotten Son and eternal Prince of Peace—could the Republic of Korea now invite a similar cosmic reckoning upon itself? Will your nation, under your leadership, President Lee Jae-myung, condemn its citizens, their


descendants, and future generations to layers of spiritual desolation, economic stagnation, diplomatic isolation, and national division by endorsing the baseless, politically orchestrated persecution of Only Begotten Daughter Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, the 83-year-old Mother of Peace, devoted spouse of the Lord of the Second Advent, and co-founder of the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification (FFWPU, formerly the Unification Church)? Or will Koreans—from the everyday worker and student to the highest echelons of power, including you, President Lee Jae-myung—seize this divine imperative, uphold unyielding justice, and command the immediate and unconditional release of the innocent Only Begotten Daughter, the Holy Mother Hak Ja Han Moon? Such an act would not only avert catastrophe but also usher in boundless heavenly blessings, elevate Korea as the eternal spiritual epicenter and beacon of global harmony, strengthen your progressive legacy of equity and anti-corruption, foster national reconciliation amid political turmoil, bolster international alliances critical to Korea's security and economy, and align perfectly with your vision of social justice by protecting the vulnerable elderly, women, and religious minorities.

Will the international community lapse into complicit silence, mirroring the apathy of Jesus' era and perpetuating endless cycles of conflict, division, hatred, and warfare that plague humanity today? Or will the world's 8 billion souls rally as one unified force, demanding the swift liberation of Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, recognizing the Republic of Korea as the providential spiritual homeland of humankind, and partnering with God's Only Begotten Daughter to fulfill the sacred mission of erecting the Kingdom of Peace on Earth—Cheon Il Guk—in this pivotal eschatological moment?


This week signifies the apex of the end times for every human soul—a final, irrevocable chance to affirm that humanity, from the humblest individual to the most powerful president, will no longer exist as orphaned wanderers in a hellscape of perpetual wars, where 98 nations are currently trapped in self-perpetuating cycles of destruction, violence, and despair. Instead, all 8 billion of us must rise in unison, President Lee Jae-myung, Honorable Citizens of the Republic of Korea, and Fellow Global Citizens, to manifest God's divine presence on Earth through the Holy Mother Hak Ja Han Moon—the singular figure holifying every soul with the Ultimate Highest God’s direct Holiness, purifying all 8 billion+ of God’s children as humanity's one true family. We must unequivocally demand her immediate release, embracing our sacred identity as children of the Heavenly Parents—Heavenly Father and Heavenly Mother—transformed into "Pure Water," as she divinely proclaimed, thereby inaugurating an unparalleled era of enduring peace, unbreakable unity, and harmonious prosperity as one indivisible family under God.

Holy Mother Hak Ja Han Moon's Historic Proclamation, April 13: Heavenly Parent, the Creator and Sovereign Master of the universe, today we have finally arrived at this sacred day, after You patiently endured and waited for 6,000 biblical years following the Fall. Heavenly Parent, we offer You our deepest gratitude and our most humble apologies. Now, You are truly the rightful Master of this earth. Our second, third, and fourth generations—the Pure Water, born from countless blessed families who exist solely because of True Parents—are venturing forth to the world to disseminate the vision of Your earthly kingdom across all lands. From this day onward, Heavenly Parent, please embrace and love Your children with all Your heart! This world will now progressively align under Your dominion, and a world of one family of humankind attending the Heavenly Parent with true love will assuredly unfold. In the name of Holy Mother Hak Ja Han Moon, I proclaim to the world that the gates of Heaven, the gates of God’s kingdom of Cheon Il Guk, are now wide open.

The Republic of Korea, once celebrated globally as a democratic miracle that ascended from the ruins of the Korean War to achieve unparalleled economic prowess, cultural influence, technological innovation, and international prestige—exemplified by its "Miracle on the Han River" with GDP growth from $1.5 billion in 1960 to over $1.7 trillion today, hosting global giants like Samsung and Hyundai, and exporting K-pop and K-dramas to billions—now teeters on the brink of eternal infamy for perpetrating one of the most egregious, systematic acts of religious repression in modern democratic history. At the heart of this profound injustice is Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, the 83-year-old great-grandmother, co-founder of the FFWPU, and a venerated icon revered by millions across 194 nations as the “Mother of Peace.” Her lifelong, tireless dedication to interfaith dialogue, massive humanitarian relief efforts reaching billions in aid, global reconciliation initiatives that bridged ideological divides, women's empowerment programs lifting millions from poverty, environmental conservation projects preserving ecosystems worldwide, and youth leadership training fostering future peacemakers has inspired and transformed billions, yet she endures fabricated, politically weaponized charges that not only endanger her fragile life but also expose the alarming fragility of Korea's democratic institutions, rule of law, and commitment to human rights. This persecution violates South Korea's Constitution Article 20(1), which guarantees freedom of religion for all citizens, by targeting a religious leader without substantive evidence, thereby infringing on the fundamental right to practice and propagate faith freely; it also breaches Article 20(2), mandating separation of religion and state, as state actors weaponize legal processes against a faith group. Furthermore, it contravenes the Framework Act on Human Rights Policy Article 4, prohibiting discrimination based on religion, by selectively prosecuting FFWPU leaders while ignoring similar actions by other groups.

We, an unyielding global coalition of millions—spanning religious leaders, human rights advocates, political figures, journalists, academics, and ordinary citizens devoted to peace, faith, justice, and the sanctity of inviolable human rights—appeal to you today with unparalleled urgency, moral authority, and strategic foresight. President Lee Jae-myung, we beseech you to terminate this state-orchestrated atrocity against Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon—the vulnerable 83-year-old great-grandmother and internationally acclaimed “Mother of Peace,” whose contributions have elevated Korea's global standing. Her unlawful detention in the Seoul Detention Center on contrived, politically motivated allegations has sparked explosive worldwide outrage, thrusting Korea into a deep-seated historical crisis of conscience that threatens your administration's credibility, national unity, economic stability, and international relations. This detention violates Constitution Article 12(1), guaranteeing personal liberty and prohibiting arbitrary arrest, as it lacks necessity under Criminal Procedure Act Article 70; it also breaches Article 12(3), requiring judicial due process for warrants, as the September 22, 2025, warrant was issued on speculative grounds without concrete evidence. The October 10, 2025, indictment by Special Prosecutor Min Joong-ki on four spurious charges—violations of the Political Funds Act (Article 45, prohibiting illegal donations by corporations or religious groups, violated by using church donations as pretext without direct evidence, breaching impartiality as funds supported humanitarian causes, and contravening Article 3 on transparency in political funding), the Improper Solicitation and Graft Act (Article 8, banning bribes for influence, violated by allegations of gifting luxury items lacking proof of Dr. Moon's involvement, turning anti-corruption tools into weapons for religious suppression, and breaching Article 22 on penalties only for proven violations), instigation of evidence destruction (Criminal Act Article 155, penalizing tampering with evidence, violated by baseless claims as no tangible proof exists, breaching presumption of innocence under Constitution Article 27(4)), and occupational embezzlement (Criminal Act Article 355, penalizing misuse of funds, violated by accusations of embezzling church funds for personal gain ignoring that funds supported global peace projects, breaching property rights under Constitution Article 23(1))—constitutes not authentic justice but a meticulously engineered "religiocide" masquerading as legal action, designed to dismantle a faith movement that has championed freedom, unity, anti-tyranny, and opposition to communist ideologies for seven decades. These charges further violate the Prosecutors' Office Act Article 4, requiring impartiality, as prosecutors exhibit bias against religious minorities; and the Act on the Prohibition of and Remedies for Damage Caused by False Reporting and Media Manipulation Article 4, by disseminating false information through daily leaks.

As detailed in recent reports from UPI (October 10, 2025), AP News (October 9, 2025), Reuters (October 10, 2025), ABC News (October 9, 2025), Bitter Winter (October 10, 2025; October 11, 2025, on selective compassion during Chuseok; October 21, 2025, highlighting "democratic descent into repression" and calling for global intervention), The New York Times (September 23, 2025; October 25, 2025, on escalating international backlash), BBC (September 22, 2025; October 24, 2025, on health deterioration and human rights concerns), Al Jazeera (September 23, 2025; October 26, 2025, labeling it "politically motivated persecution"), The Economist (October 17, 2025; October 25, 2025, noting "bogus elements and disgrace to democracy"), The Korea Herald (October 15, 2025; October 26, 2025, exposing prosecutorial overreach), Nikkei Asia (September 25, 2025; October 23, 2025, on regional diplomatic fallout), Chosun Ilbo (October 17, 2025; October 26, 2025, on detention review and public outcry), Korea JoongAng Daily (October 15, 2025; October 25, 2025, on scandals and political revenge), Monthly Chosun (October 2025 issue, detailing lack of evidence), Straits Times (October 10, 2025; October 24, 2025, on grandsons' concerns), The Washington Times (October 22, 2025; October 24, 2025, on health deterioration and "framed" claims; October 26, 2025, on parallel religious persecutions), Premier Christian News (October 23, 2025; October 25, 2025, on interfaith prayers for release), FamilyFedIHQ.org (October 15, 2025; October 22, 2025, response to MBC broadcast distortions; October 26, 2025, update on global prayers), AllKpop (October 22, 2025; October 25, 2025, on cultural impact), South China Morning Post (October 3, 2025; October 24, 2025, on Asian human rights alarms), EIN Presswire (October 21, 2025, on Muslim women's global alarm; October 26, 2025, on interfaith coalitions), Newsday (October 10, 2025; October 25, 2025, on insufficient evidence), The Business Times (September 22, 2025; October 26, 2025, on economic risks), and new endorsements this week from The Monarch Report (October 23, 2025, endorsing her historical peace contributions with Rev. Moon), AMMWEC (October 23, 2025, calling for release as a violation of religious freedom), Kaeleigh Moffitt (October 20, 2025, on interfaith prayer luncheon for her freedom), these accusations hinge on tenuous links to former officials, coerced witness testimonies under prosecutorial pressure, speculative inferences without forensic proof, and flipped statements from detained aides, with no direct evidence implicating Dr. Moon. Experts, including those from The Korea Herald (October 15, 2025; October 26, 2025), Nikkei Asia (September 25, 2025; October 23, 2025), Chosun Ilbo (October 17, 2025; October 26, 2025; September 22, 2025, on detention review), Korea JoongAng Daily (October 15, 2025; October 25, 2025), Monthly Chosun (October 2025), Al Jazeera (September 23, 2025; October 26, 2025), The Guardian (September 23, 2025; October 25, 2025), The Hindu (September 18, 2025; October 24, 2025), South China Morning Post (October 24, 2025), Religion News Service (September 17, 2025; October 25, 2025), Yonhap News (October 17, 2025; October 26, 2025), Human Rights Without Frontiers (September 20, 2025; October 25, 2025), The Economist (October 17, 2025; October 25, 2025, labeling the church "engulfed in scandal" but noting denials and bias), Courthouse News Service (October 2025; October 26, 2025), The Washington Stand (October 2025; October 25, 2025), and World News Group (October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025), label the case a "proxy for political revenge" amid your administration's probes into conservative predecessors, highlighting overreach, bogus elements, and a disgrace to democracy. This selective targeting breaches the Anti-Discrimination Act (proposed, linked to Constitution Article 11), prohibiting religious discrimination, and the National Human Rights Commission Act Article 4, mandating equality.

The torment inflicted upon Dr. Moon—physical, emotional, psychological, and spiritual—equates to severe medical negligence, elder abuse, and a flagrant assault on human dignity, violating multiple South Korean laws and international norms. The Family Federation has repeatedly sounded alarms: "Chairman Han is in critically poor health due to her advanced age and chronic conditions, including recurrent arrhythmia, diabetes, partial blindness, hypertension, and post-surgical complications, with grave fears of irreversible deterioration or sudden collapse during detention." Just one week before her arrest on September 22, 2025, this frail elder underwent life-saving heart surgery, emerging in a weakened state requiring constant medical monitoring (Chosun Ilbo, September 5, 2025; September 4, 2025, on hospitalization; October 26, 2025, update on worsening symptoms). As of today, October 26, 2025, after 34 agonizing days of incarceration, she barely survives on painkillers, displaying alarming symptoms corroborated by supporters, medical aides, family statements, and investigative journalism: excruciating pain manifesting as blue-tinged lips, labored breathing, intensified arrhythmia episodes, visible emaciation with significant weight loss exceeding 10% of body mass, deep dark circles under her eyes, dry and cracked skin prone to infections, a persistently flushed red face indicating inflammation or circulatory distress, forced to endure a cold, hard floor in a 70-square-foot (6.5-square-meter) windowless cell devoid of heat, proper bedding, chairs, or basic amenities, exacerbating her diabetes and blindness (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 24, 2025, grandsons Shin Chul Moon and Shin Joon Moon detailing "nearly blind" condition, difficulty walking/eating without support, no support in detention; October 26, 2025, on imminent risk; Premier Christian News, October 23, 2025; October 25, 2025). Human rights specialists, as cited in The Washington Times (October 10, 2025; October 22, 2025, detailing 10-12 hour interrogations, nearly blind, heart condition, only 10 minutes daily visitors, possible 6-month hold if trial delayed, prosecutors refusing home confinement fearing evidence tampering; October 24, 2025, on "framed" claims and health worries; October 26, 2025, warning of cardiac failure), Bitter Winter (October 7, 2025; October 10, 2025, calling it "not a corruption case—it’s a purge"; October 11, 2025, on refugee status hypocrisy; October 21, 2025, on repression), The Monarch Report (October 12, 2025; October 23, 2025), FamilyFedIHQ.org (October 15, 2025; October 22, 2025, criticizing MBC's biased "PD Note" for distortions without church interviews; October 26, 2025), and Religion Media Centre (October 20, 2025; October 25, 2025), decry this as "medical torture" and "cruel, inhuman treatment" in a purported democracy, with her family warning of imminent cardiac failure or stroke if not released immediately. Despite these dire, life-threatening conditions, the court's denial of her detention appeal on October 1, 2025 (PR Newswire, October 1, 2025; Korea Herald, October 2, 2025; October 26, 2025, on continued denial), prioritizes partisan agendas over humanitarian compassion, flagrantly assaulting her fundamental rights and contravening a vast array of South Korean laws, constitutional provisions, criminal procedure statutes, and international commitments. This neglect violates the Welfare of Senior Citizens Act Article 2(4) & Article 39-2, defining elder abuse as physical/mental violence or neglect; the Act on the Promotion of Welfare of the Aged Article 3, mandating state promotion of aged welfare; the Long-Term Care Insurance Act for the Aged Article 2, providing care for elderly; Constitution Article 36(3), state protection of health; the Public Health and Medical Services Act Article 2, ensuring health rights; and the Act on the Prevention of and Countermeasures against Infectious Diseases Article 3, state duty to protect health.

Below is an exhaustive, expanded catalog of violations committed by the Special Prosecutor's office under Min Joong-ki (and associated figures like Choi Jae-hyeon in related leaks and scandals, who daily disseminate false information to media outlets, inventing sensational fakes about bribery, embezzlement, and attacks on Dr. Moon's visionary projects like the Mekong River Peace Park—a cross-border initiative fostering regional harmony and environmental sustainability since 2018, falsely portrayed as a political slush fund—and Sun Moon University initiatives for global youth education and peace-building, established in 1994 to promote intercultural learning and ethical leadership, wrongly accused of fund misuse solely to unjustly persecute her and dismantle her legacy—actions that must stop immediately with the truth revealed, as these leaks breach Criminal Act Article 126 on defamation and Prosecutors' Office Act Article 4 on impartiality), judiciary, and detention authorities against Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon. Each violation details the specific law or article breached, its essential mandate, and the precise manner in which state actions infringe upon it, constructing an airtight, interconnected legal argument for her immediate release. These breaches not only erode Korea's rule of law but also risk severe international repercussions, including sanctions under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), UN scrutiny, and diplomatic fallout, as highlighted in Amnesty International's 2023-2025 reports, U.S. State Department Human Rights Reports (2023-2024; 2025 update on religious repression), and the 2023-2025 Report on International Religious Freedom: South Korea (noting separation of religion and state, but persistent issues with arbitrary detention and bias). By rectifying these, President Lee Jae-myung, you can safeguard your legacy, prevent economic isolation, and align with your equity agenda.

Legal ViolationLaw/Article ViolatedLegal MandateViolation by the State
Human Dignity and WorthConstitution, Article 10All citizens shall be assured of human worth and dignity and have the right to pursue happiness. The State must confirm and guarantee fundamental, inviolable human rights.Detaining an 83-year-old post-surgery patient in dehumanizing conditions degrades her dignity, neglects state duties, and demands humanitarian release to fulfill this foundational principle, preventing national moral decline, especially as interrogations last 10-12 hours (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Elder Abuse and NeglectWelfare of Senior Citizens Act, Article 2 (4) & Article 39-2; Framework Act on Healthy Families, Article 3 (promoting family welfare including elders); Act on the Prohibition of and Remedies for Damage Caused by False Reporting and Media Manipulation, Article 4 (prohibiting false media dissemination); Act on the Promotion of Health of the Aged, Article 3 (elderly health promotion)Defines elder abuse as physical, mental, emotional violence, economic exploitation, neglect, or abandonment of those 65+, requiring prevention, detection, and welfare promotion; prohibits mistreatment in facilities; bans false reporting that harms dignity; state promotes elderly health.Incarcerating a chronically ill octogenarian despite medical alerts constitutes physical and emotional abuse plus neglect, breaching elder protections and necessitating immediate halt to align with your welfare policies, compounded by denial of wheelchair or medical care (X post @seeking12gates, October 22, 2025; prosecutors like Choi Jae-hyeon leaking false info daily to media, inventing fakes on her projects; October 26, 2025 updates).
Right to Health and WelfareConstitution, Article 36 (3); Act on the Prevention of and Countermeasures against Infectious Diseases, Article 3 (state duty to protect health); Public Health and Medical Services Act, Article 2 (ensuring health rights); Framework Act on Health, Article 7 (elderly health promotion)The State shall protect the health of all citizens.Ignoring post-surgical vulnerabilities, arrhythmia, diabetes, and blindness in detention equates to state-endorsed endangerment, violating health obligations and risking fatal outcomes that could tarnish your administration, with mold-like conditions similar to Rev. Son's cell (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
State Duty to Promote Welfare of the AgedConstitution, Article 34 (5); Act on the Promotion of Welfare of the Aged, Article 3; Long-Term Care Insurance Act for the Aged, Article 2 (providing care for elderly); Basic Act on Healthy Families, Article 3 (family support)The State shall endeavor to promote the welfare of the aged.Prolonged detention of an elderly woman in health peril contravenes this duty, transforming welfare into harm and contradicting your social justice vision for vulnerable groups.
Personal LibertyConstitution, Article 12 (1); Criminal Procedure Act, Article 70 (detention only if necessary); Article 84 (warrant only for substantial reasons); Article 200-2 (no arbitrary arrest)All citizens enjoy personal liberty; no arrest or detention except as provided by law.Arbitrary arrest on conjectural grounds without evidence violates liberty, lacking lawful basis and demanding release to restore democratic trust, as no flight risk for health-impaired elder (U.S. State Dept 2024 Report on Human Rights Practices: South Korea; Bitter Winter, October 11, 2025; October 21, 2025).
Prohibition of Torture and Compelled TestimonyConstitution, Article 12 (2); ICCPR Article 7 (no torture); Criminal Procedure Act, Article 310 (inadmissible coerced evidence); Criminal Act, Article 125 (prohibiting cruel treatment by officials)No citizen shall be tortured or compelled to self-incriminate.Exhausting 10-12 hour interrogations post-surgery (September 17, 24, 29, 2025; The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; ABC News, September 18, 2025; October 26, 2025) amount to torture and coercion, breaching this ban and inviting ICCPR Article 7 condemnation.
Freedom from Cruel PunishmentConstitution, Article 12 (4); Criminal Act, Article 125 (prohibiting cruel treatment by officials); ICCPR Article 10 (humane treatment)No unfavorable treatment for relatives' acts.Imposing vicarious liability for associates' alleged deeds inflicts cruel punishment, violating fairness and requiring dismissal to uphold equality (Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025).
Prohibition on Arbitrary DetentionConstitution, Article 12 (3); Criminal Procedure Act, Article 84 (warrant requirements); Article 200-2 (no arbitrary arrest); Article 200-3 (detention limits)Warrants must follow judicial due process.September 22, 2025, warrant based on speculation breaches due process, mandating revocation under Criminal Procedure Act Article 93, as highlighted in Amnesty International reports on arbitrary detention (Reuters, September 22, 2025; Al Jazeera, September 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Freedom of MovementConstitution, Article 14; Immigration Control Act, Article 4; Article 4-2 (justified bans only); Act on the Protection of Personal Information, Article 3 (privacy in movement)Citizens enjoy freedom of residence and movement.May 2025 pre-indictment exit ban restricts mobility without cause, infringing rights and necessitating lift to prevent diplomatic backlash (Chosun Ilbo, May 22, 2025; The Guardian, September 23, 2025; October 25, 2025).
Illegal Imposition of Travel BanImmigration Act, Article 4 & Article 4-2; Act on the Protection of Personal Information, Article 3 (privacy in movement)Departure prohibitions only for justified reasons (e.g., flight risk, taxes); ensures safe border management without arbitrary restrictions.Preemptive ban on a non-fugitive elder exceeds authority, violating free movement and aligning with patterns of religious targeting (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Protection from Illegal Search and SeizureConstitution, Article 16; Criminal Procedure Act, Article 106; Article 215 (searches with warrants)Freedom from residential intrusion; warrants required.July 18, 2025, aggressive church raids without warrant integrity breach privacy, demanding accountability to protect faith communities (Korea Herald, September 11, 2025, on raids; The Washington Times, October 22, 2025, on raids on conservative pastors; October 26, 2025).
Right to PrivacyConstitution, Article 17; Personal Information Protection Act, Article 3; Article 15 (consent for collection)No infringement on citizen privacy.Invasive probes into religious affairs violate privacy, risking broader suppression of beliefs (Bitter Winter, October 11, 2025; October 21, 2025).
Freedom of ConscienceConstitution, Article 19All enjoy freedom of conscience.State interference suppresses personal beliefs, contravening core freedoms and inviting UN scrutiny (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Freedom of ReligionConstitution, Article 20 (1) & (2); 2022-2025 Report on International Religious Freedom: South Korea (mandates separation of religion and state); Framework Act on Human Rights Policy, Article 4 (non-discrimination); Act on the Prevention of Discrimination, Article 2Freedom of religion; no state religion, separation of religion and state; prohibits religious discrimination.Targeted persecution of a faith leader blurs church-state lines, violating separation and demanding cessation to preserve democracy, as noted in U.S. State Dept reports on religious freedom violations (Premier Christian News, October 23, 2025; The Washington Times, October 22, 2025, on weaponizing justice against religious opponents; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025, calling it a violation).
Right to PropertyConstitution, Article 23 (1); Civil Act, Article 185; Article 749 (compensation for damages)Property rights guaranteed; limits by law.Unfounded embezzlement charges threaten assets without proof, breaching rights (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Presumption of InnocenceConstitution, Article 27 (4); Criminal Procedure Act, Article 275-2; Article 326 (acquittal if doubt)Innocent until proven guilty.Detention for "evidence destruction" inverts presumption, requiring bail under Criminal Procedure Act Article 95 (UPI, October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Right to Fair and Public TrialConstitution, Article 27 (1); Criminal Procedure Act, Article 8; Prosecutors' Office Act, Article 4 (impartiality); Act on Press Arbitration, Article 6 (fair reporting)Trial by judges per law and Constitution.Biased, expedited proceedings deny fairness, mandating reform, especially with media leaks biasing public (Prosecutors' Office Act, Article 4; FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025, on MBC bias; October 26, 2025).
Right to Speedy TrialConstitution, Article 27 (3); Criminal Procedure Act, Article 92-2; Article 268 (trial within 6 months)Right to speedy trial.Prolonged pre-trial detention delays justice, violating limits under Criminal Procedure Act Article 92, with possible 6-month extension (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Prohibition on Double JeopardyConstitution, Article 13 (1)No repeated prosecution for same crime.Reviving dismissed claims mimics double jeopardy, breaching protections (Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025).
Equality Before the LawConstitution, Article 11 (1); Framework Act on Human Rights Policy, Article 4; National Human Rights Commission Act, Article 4; Anti-Discrimination Act (proposed, linked to Article 11)Equality; no discrimination on religion, sex, status.Religious-based selective prosecution discriminates, contradicting your anti-inequality stance, as per Amnesty International on human rights violations (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; October 26, 2025).
State Duty to Promote WelfareConstitution, Article 34 (1) & (2); Social Security Act, Article 3; Basic Act on Healthy Families, Article 3Right to dignified life; state promotes social security/welfare.Endangering an elder contravenes welfare duties, demanding release (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
State Duty to Promote Women's WelfareConstitution, Article 34 (3); Framework Act on Gender Equality, Article 3; Act on the Prevention of Domestic Violence, Article 2Promote women's welfare and rights.Persecuting an elderly female leader ignores gender protections, misaligning with equity goals (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025, Muslim women on rights standards; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
Right to Healthy EnvironmentConstitution, Article 35 (1); Environmental Policy Act, Article 4; Framework Act on Environmental Policy, Article 3Right to healthy environment; state/citizens protect it.Harsh detention conditions violate health rights, exacerbating illnesses, similar to mold in Rev. Son's cell (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
State Duty to Protect FamilyConstitution, Article 36 (1); Healthy Family Act, Article 3; Basic Act on Healthy Families, Article 4 (family support); Act on the Prevention of Domestic Violence, Article 2 (elder inclusion)Sustain family on dignity/equality; state achieves this.Attacking a family-centered faith undermines protections (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 15, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Freedom of AssociationConstitution, Article 21 (1); Labor Standards Act, Article 5 (non-discrimination)Freedom of speech, press, assembly, association.Persecuting religious groups stifles association, violating collective rights (Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025).
Protection of Human Rights in Criminal ProceedingsConstitution, Article 12 (5); Criminal Procedure Act, Article 198-2; Article 163 (witness protection); Article 163-2 (vulnerable protection)Right to prompt counsel; state assigns if needed.Limited counsel during interrogations breaches safeguards (ABC News, September 18, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Prohibition on Retroactive LawsConstitution, Article 13 (2)No prosecution for non-crimes at time; no heavier penalties.Retroactive interpretations mimic punishment, invalidating charges.
Right to Work and WelfareConstitution, Article 32 (1); Basic Act on Labor, Article 4Right to work; state promotes employment.Disrupting peacebuilding work infringes labor rights (UPF.org, September 26, 2025; October 25, 2025).
Special Consideration for the Elderly in ProceedingsCriminal Procedure Act, Article 282 & Article 71-2; Act on the Punishment of Crimes of Domestic Violence, Article 2 (elder inclusion); Act on the Protection of Victims of Crime, Article 3Mandatory counsel for 70+; considers age in procedures.Intense questioning disregards elderly safeguards, demanding adjustments (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Rescission of DetentionCriminal Procedure Act, Article 93; Article 97 (cancellation if unjustified)Revoke detention if grounds cease.Health risks and no flight danger qualify for rescission, yet denied (Korea Herald, October 1, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Mandatory Release on BailCriminal Procedure Act, Article 95; Article 100 (execution procedures)Bail shall be allowed absent risks.Refusal for low-risk elder is unlawful, mandating release (Reuters, September 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Procedure for Execution of Release on BailCriminal Procedure Act, Article 100Prompt bail execution procedures.Failure to apply prolongs injustice.
Cancellation of Release on Bail and DetentionCriminal Procedure Act, Article 97Cancellation only with justification.Arbitrary detention abuses power.
Special Rules for Criminal Defendant in PrisonCriminal Procedure Act, Article 355; Administration and Treatment of Correctional Institution Inmates Act, Article 89; Enforcement Decree, Article 12 (medical care)Accommodations including health.Harsh conditions violate rules for ill defendants, including medical treatment denial (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Request for Release on BailCriminal Procedure Act, Article 94Accused/counsel may request bail.Denying requests despite health breaches right.
Refund of Bail MoneyCriminal Procedure Act, Article 104Fair post-release handling.Indefinite detention prevents resolution.
Maximum Detention PeriodsCriminal Procedure Act, Article 92; Article 268 (limits on extensions)Limits pre-trial detention; exceptional extensions.Exceeding for elder exceeds limits, with 50 days for Rev. Son as parallel (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Prohibition on Excessive InterrogationCriminal Procedure Act, Article 243; Article 164 (interrogation limits)Respect human rights; no excessive duration.10-12 hour sessions constitute inhumane treatment (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; ABC News, September 18, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Right to Medical Care in DetentionCriminal Procedure Act, Article 89; Enforcement Decree of the Administration and Treatment of Correctional Institution Inmates Act, Article 12; Public Health and Medical Services Act, Article 15Necessary medical treatment for detainees.Denying care for chronic issues endangers life, violating provision, no wheelchair access (X post @seeking12gates, October 22, 2025; The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Protection Against CoercionCriminal Procedure Act, Article 309; Article 310 (inadmissible evidence)Coerced evidence inadmissible.Reliance on pressured testimonies undermines case (UPI, October 10, 2025; Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025).
Prohibition of DiscriminationConstitution, Article 11 (2); Anti-Discrimination Act (proposed, linked to Article 11); National Human Rights Commission Act, Article 4No privileged classes; equality in all life aspects.Religious discrimination creates inequality, breaching mandate, as per 2022-2025 International Religious Freedom Report (The Economist, October 17, 2025; October 25, 2025).
Freedom from Inhuman TreatmentConstitution, Article 12 (6); ICCPR Article 10; Criminal Act, Article 125Right to humane treatment if liberty deprived.Inhumane cell conditions violate humane standards, akin to torture tools (USCIRF reports on religious freedom violations; Bitter Winter, October 11, 2025; October 21, 2025).
Right to PetitionConstitution, Article 26 (1)Right to petition state for redress.Ignoring health petitions breaches access to justice (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 15, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Protection of Victims and WitnessesCriminal Procedure Act, Article 163-2; Act on the Protection of Crime Victims, Article 7Protects vulnerable in investigations.Treating elder as criminal ignores vulnerability (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Right to Compensation for Unlawful DetentionCriminal Procedure Act, Article 198; Act on Remedies for Wrongful Conviction and Imprisonment, Article 2Compensation for wrongful detention.Grounds for future claims, but immediate release prevents further harm, as in U.S. State Dept notes on compensation for abuses (October 26, 2025 update).
Prohibition on Abuse of PowerCriminal Act, Article 123; Prosecutors' Office Act, Article 4Officials abusing authority punished.Prosecutorial overreach constitutes abuse, warranting investigation (Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025).
Right to Religious Practice in DetentionEnforcement Decree of the Administration and Treatment of Correctional Institution Inmates Act, Article 12; Constitution Article 20Allows religious activities in prison.Restricting faith practices violates decree (Premier Christian News, October 23, 2025; October 25, 2025).
Elderly Health PromotionFramework Act on Health, Article 7; Act on the Promotion of Health of the Aged, Article 3State promotes elderly health.Detention worsens health, breaching promotion duty (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Abuse of Prosecutorial Power in Media LeaksProsecutors' Office Act, Article 4; Criminal Act, Article 126 (Defamation); Act on Press Arbitration, Article 6 (fair reporting)Prosecutors must act impartially; prohibits spreading false information damaging reputation.Daily leaks of sensational, unverified claims to media by prosecutors including Min Joong-ki and Choi Jae-hyeon in related scandals, inventing "false information" about bribery and embezzlement, violate impartiality and defame Dr. Moon, fueling public bias and undermining fair trial (e.g., MBC 'PD Note' October 21, 2025, biased documentary without church interviews; FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025, response calling it distortions; October 26, 2025).
Violation of Fair InvestigationCriminal Procedure Act, Article 198-2; Article 195 (impartial investigation)Investigations must respect human rights, avoid bias.Fabricating controversies around Dr. Moon's projects at Sun Moon University—claiming embezzlement in educational initiatives without evidence—constitutes biased invention to persecute, demanding cessation and truth revelation (MBC 'PD Note', October 21, 2025, biased coverage; X post @seeking12gates, October 22, 2025, criticizing lack of balance; Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025).
Political Funds Act Violation PretextPolitical Funds Act, Article 45; Article 3 (transparency)Prohibits illegal donations by corporations or religious groups.Using church donations as pretext for prosecution without direct evidence links to Dr. Moon breaches impartiality, as donations were for humanitarian causes, not political gain (AP News, October 9, 2025; UPI, October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Improper Solicitation and Graft Act AbuseImproper Solicitation and Graft Act, Article 8; Article 22 (penalties for violations)Bans bribes for influence.Allegations of gifting luxury items lack proof of Dr. Moon's direct involvement, violating due process and turning anti-corruption tools into weapons for religious suppression (BBC, September 22, 2025; FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 15, 2025, clarifying no involvement; October 26, 2025).
Instigation of Evidence Destruction FabricationCriminal Act, Article 155; Article 152 (attempted destruction)Penalizes tampering with evidence.Claims of evidence destruction are baseless, as no tangible proof exists, breaching presumption of innocence and justifying immediate release (Reuters, October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Occupational Embezzlement MisapplicationCriminal Act, Article 355; Article 356 (aggravated embezzlement)Penalizes misuse of funds.Accusations of embezzling church funds for personal gain ignore that funds supported global peace projects, violating property rights and requiring exoneration (The Economist, October 17, 2025; Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025, on laughably low bribe values; October 25, 2025).
Arbitrary Arrest and DetentionCriminal Procedure Act, Article 200-2; Constitution Article 12 (7); Article 200-3 (detention limits)No arbitrary arrest; detention only with warrant.Arrest without sufficient evidence violates, as per U.S. State Dept 2024-2025 report on arbitrary detentions in South Korea (Al Jazeera, September 23, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Discrimination Against Religious MinoritiesAnti-Discrimination Act (proposed, but linked to Constitution Article 11); National Human Rights Commission Act, Article 4; Act on the Prevention of Discrimination, Article 2Prohibits discrimination based on religion.Selective targeting of FFWPU as a "cult-like" group (The Economist, October 17, 2025; BBC, September 17, 2025; October 25, 2025) breaches, fostering bias.
Violation of Right to Religious PracticeConstitution Article 20; Enforcement Decree of the Administration and Treatment of Correctional Institution Inmates Act, Article 12Allows religious activities.Restricting practices in detention violates, as per interfaith calls (Premier Christian News, October 23, 2025; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
Breach of Gender EqualityFramework Act on Gender Equality, Article 3Promotes gender rights.Targeting female peace leader breaches, contradicting policies (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; October 26, 2025).
Environmental Health ViolationFramework Act on Environmental Policy, Article 3Protects health through environment.Poor cell conditions violate, exacerbating health (The Washington Times, October 26, 2025).
Family Protection BreachBasic Act on Healthy Families, Article 4Supports family.Disrupting family-centered faith breaches (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 26, 2025).
Labor Rights InfringementLabor Standards Act, Article 5Non-discrimination.Suppressing religious work breaches (UPF.org, October 25, 2025).
Victim Protection FailureAct on the Protection of Victims of Crime, Article 3Protects vulnerable.Treating elder as criminal breaches (The Washington Times, October 26, 2025).
Wrongful Imprisonment RemediesAct on Remedies for Wrongful Conviction and Imprisonment, Article 2Compensation for wrongful imprisonment.Grounds for claims, release prevents harm.
Defamation through LeaksCriminal Act, Article 126Prohibits defamation.Choi Jae-hyeon's daily false leaks on projects like Mekong River Peace Park breach, demanding truth revelation (Bitter Winter, October 21, 2025).

These violations extend to Korea's ICCPR commitments, including arbitrary detention bans (Article 9), torture prohibitions (Article 7), religious freedom (Article 18), non-discrimination (Article 26), fair trials (Article 14), and equality (Article 26). They also flout UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (Nelson Mandela Rules, Rules 1, 24 on health/dignity) and Tokyo Rules on non-custodial measures for vulnerable groups like elders, to which Korea is bound. Amnesty International (2023-2025; October 26, 2025 update) and U.S. State Department reports underscore persistent religious discrimination in Korea, urging adherence to avert sanctions. We demand an urgent mercy petition, unconditional release, and full exoneration to rectify these interconnected injustices, thereby pleasing your constituency, enhancing your global image, and averting crisis.

For over six months, the Special Prosecutor's office under Min Joong-ki has unleashed a relentless, systematic onslaught on Dr. Moon, exemplifying abusive authority that undermines Korea's democratic pillars and risks economic repercussions like investor flight and trade disruptions. As one of three probes under your administration targeting the prior conservative regime, it reeks of partisan vendetta, deepening national divisions and contradicting your unity pledges (The Economist, October 17, 2025; October 25, 2025; Korea JoongAng Daily, October 15, 2025; October 26, 2025, on scandals). The May 2025 exit ban, imposed sans charges, inflicted undue stress, equating her to fugitives and violating Constitution Article 14 and Immigration Act Article 4-2 (Chosun Ilbo, May 22, 2025; October 26, 2025). July 18, 2025, raids with excessive force, followed by brutal interrogations—including a 25-hour ordeal on September 17, 2025, days post-surgery—embody cruelty, breaching Constitution Article 12 (2) and Criminal Procedure Act Article 243 (Korea Herald, September 17, 2025; ABC News, September 18, 2025; October 26, 2025). Subsequent sessions on September 24 and 29 amplified her agony. The September 22 arrest warrant, premised on fabricated "evidence destruction" fears, mocks due process, as documents were public via internal disputes, invalidating pretexts under Criminal Procedure Act Article 93 (Chosun Ilbo, September 22, 2025; Korea Herald, September 23, 2025; Reuters, September 21, 2025, on court considering warrant; Al Jazeera, September 22, 2025; October 26, 2025, on court issuing warrant). Prosecutors, including Min Joong-ki and echoes of past figures like Choi Jae-hyeon in leak scandals, have daily leaked false information to media, inventing sensational claims about bribery and attacks on Sun Moon University projects—without evidence, solely to unjustly persecute Dr. Moon and dismantle her great projects like the Mekong River Peace Park (pursued independently since 2018, promoting biodiversity and cross-border cooperation, not church policy) and Sun Moon University (a beacon for intercultural learning since 1994, educating over 20,000 students annually in peace studies, falsely accused of embezzlement)—these fakes must stop immediately, with the truth revealed to restore her legacy (MBC 'PD Note', October 21, 2025, biased coverage; X post @seeking12gates, October 22, 2025, criticizing lack of balance; FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025, official response to distortions; Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025, on implausible charges; Hyojeong Briefing, October 20, 2025, clarifying no church-level project; October 26, 2025 updates on leaks).

Contemporary Korean journalistic investigations unequivocally affirm her innocence, exposing prosecutorial flaws. The FFWPU categorically denies her involvement, ascribing actions to isolated figures like Yoon Young-ho (arrested August 2025) and Jung Won-ju, with Dr. Moon disavowing knowledge (UPI, October 10, 2025; AP News, October 9, 2025; Newsday, October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025, on no direct orders). Reports from The Korea Herald (October 15, 2025; September 22, 2025, on warrant hearing; October 26, 2025), Chosun Ilbo (October 17, 2025; September 29, 2025, on detention review; October 26, 2025), Korea JoongAng Daily (October 15, 2025; October 25, 2025), Nikkei Asia (September 25, 2025; October 23, 2025), TV Chosun (October 17, 2025; October 26, 2025), Channel A News (October 17, 2025; October 26, 2025), The Economist (October 17, 2025; October 25, 2025), Monthly Chosun (October 2025), Al Jazeera (September 23, 2025; October 26, 2025), The Guardian (September 23, 2025; October 25, 2025), The Hindu (September 18, 2025; October 24, 2025), South China Morning Post (October 3, 2025; October 24, 2025), Religion News Service (September 17, 2025; October 25, 2025), Yonhap News (October 17, 2025; October 26, 2025), Human Rights Without Frontiers (September 20, 2025; October 25, 2025), The New York Times (September 23, 2025; October 25, 2025), Reuters (September 22, 2025; October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025), The Washington Times (October 22, 2025; October 24, 2025, on insufficient evidence and framing; October 26, 2025), and Courthouse News Service (October 2025; October 26, 2025) portray this as a partisan witch hunt amid instability, leveraging FFWPU as a conservative proxy, with coerced confessions, no direct links, flipped testimonies, lack of forensic evidence, and flawed processes labeled "overreach," "bogus," "false charges," "disgrace to democracy," and "attempted assassination of faith." Bitter Winter's October 10 exposé terms it a "democratic descent into repression," while The New York Times (September 23; October 25, 2025) and Reuters (September 22; October 26, 2025) note denials and political motivations, with no substantial proof. The Washington Times (October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025) highlights parallel detentions of Christian leaders like Rev. Son Hyun-bo (nearly 50 days in moldy cell at Busan Detention Center, suffering from mold but remaining faithful, as per his son Chance: “He is someone who does not express his weakness... God has got my back”), raids on conservative pastors, and warnings of weaponizing justice against opponents, amplified by the apparent suicide of an official under the same interrogators, raising concerns of left-leaning government abuse (former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on X: “The lawfare... is deeply troubling... a betrayal of democratic principles”; October 26, 2025 update).

This week's news endorsing Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, translated from Korean where applicable (though most recent endorsements are in English via global platforms, with Korean media like Yonhap News and Chosun Ilbo echoing international calls in Korean editions—translated here for comprehensiveness): From Yonhap News (October 26, 2025, Korean: "통일교 한학자 총재 구금에 대한 국제적 항의 증가" – Translation: "Increasing International Protests Over Detention of Unification Church Leader Hak Ja Han," endorsing her as a peace icon and calling for release to uphold religious freedom); Chosun Ilbo (October 26, 2025, Korean: "한학자 구금, 종교 자유 침해로 비난" – Translation: "Hak Ja Han Detention Criticized as Violation of Religious Freedom," supporting her humanitarian legacy and urging humanitarian release); The Monarch Report (October 23, 2025, endorsing her role in historic peace meetings with Gorbachev, calling for freedom); AMMWEC (October 23, 2025, "joins faith leaders... calling for immediate release of Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon... violation of religious freedom," translated from partial Korean press coverage in Korea JoongAng Daily October 24, 2025: "미국 무슬림 여성 단체, 한학자 석방 촉구" – Translation: "American Muslim Women's Group Urges Release of Hak Ja Han"); Kaeleigh Moffitt (October 20, 2025, on interfaith prayer for her release, echoed in Korean X posts like @HopeTK000 October 21, 2025, supporting freedom). These endorsements, alongside global prayers, reinforce her innocence and the need for release.

The worldwide mobilization for Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon's freedom is monumental, transcending borders, religions, and politics, with unprecedented scale that could bolster your leadership if channeled positively. • Seoul Detention Center Vigil: As of October 26, 2025, thousands maintain 24/7 prayers in Uiwang, Gyeonggi Province, braving elements with chants, banners, and assemblies for justice, per Family Federation reports. On October 19, over 300 Korean pastors from nationwide churches united in prayer for religious freedom, decrying violations (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 14-15, 2025; October 26, 2025; X posts @FamilyFedUsa, October 16-20, 2025; @monarchreport25, October 22, 2025, on grandson Moon Shin Chul's address; The Washington Times, October 24, 2025, on grandsons' appeals; October 26, 2025, on escalating crowds). Religious leaders at October 13 rally proclaimed: “Detention of True Mother Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon Is a Violation of Religious Freedom” (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 14, 2025; Facebook/FamilyFedUSA, September 26, 2025; October 26, 2025). Covered by UPI (October 10; October 26, 2025), Bitter Winter (October 7; October 26, 2025), Instagram reels (October 17; October 25, 2025), and X posts showing ceaseless prayers. • Global Prayer Chain: Hundreds of thousands engage in synchronized prayers across nearly all countries, from New York rallies to online campaigns surpassing 50 million engagements, with #ReleaseTheMotherOfPeace trending globally (AP News, October 9; The Monarch Report, October 12; October 23, 2025; X @DemianDunkley, October 19; @seeking12gates, October 22, on documentary reaction; @JohnAbelseth, October 21; @AnyaChen52, October 21-18; @GaborVasmatics, October 21; @gloria_82763, October 21; @DooseJohnD84208, October 21; @sophie_wu63935, October 20; @GarrattNew, October 19; @73mama51, October 19; @AngeleNkwe, October 19; @13chi31, October 17; @uc2seibanzai, October 20; @mihoko_ueki, October 18; @FortuneWinter, October 15, 6, 10, calling for love-led change; @YoungWinterSoon, October 22, on peace vision; @monarchreport25, October 11, on surviving communism with love; @musk_1300, October 19, on peace efforts against opposition; @Kathy3k4, October 22, on family calls; @BobSelle, October 21; @a_yujin_m, October 21; @JurajLajda1, October 21; @Cfroehlich19601, October 24; @Lenka21i, October 25; @HopeTK000, October 21; @AliMahjoub40, October 21; @MeykePetronela, October 6; @SomorjaiKi95936, October 13; @Bonolv15, October 16; @MoffittKaeleigh, October 20-23). Interfaith leaders in Detroit issued an October 17 joint letter: "We appeal to American leaders to oppose the arrest on democratic and humanitarian grounds" (X @MoffittKaeleigh, October 17; EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025, on Muslim women alarm; October 26, 2025). Additional X posts from @Bonolv15 (October 16), @FortuneWinter (October 15, 6, 10, 23), @mihoko_ueki (October 17-18, 25), @AnyaChen52 (October 18), @resurrection_2 (October 15), @monarchreport25 (October 4, 11, 18, 21, 23 on American pastor briefing Trump), @JohnAbelseth (October 18, 21, 24, 25), @sangwonie01 (October 9), @aliwill1955 (October 22, to Rep. Mark Walker), @seeking12gates (October 22), @ammwecofficial (October 23), @Kathy3k4 (October 22), @BobSelle (October 21), @a_yujin_m (October 21), @JurajLajda1 (October 21), @Cfroehlich19601 (October 24), @Lenka21i (October 25), and @HopeTK000 (October 21) amplify global prayers and support. • U.S. President Donald Trump: “WHAT IS GOING ON IN SOUTH KOREA? Seems like a Purge or Revolution. We can’t have that and do business there. Release the Mother of Peace NOW!” (X Post, October 12, 2025; The Monarch Report, October 18; October 23, 2025). • Mike Pompeo, Former U.S. Secretary of State: “The lawfare being directed at religious leader Dr. Hak Ja Han in South Korea is deeply troubling. The intensifying assaults on religious liberty are a betrayal of the democratic principles that South Korea is meant to espouse. A nation that persecutes an 83-year-old woman of peace has lost its moral compass. South Korea must release Dr. Hak Ja Han immediately to restore its standing.” (The Washington Stand, October 2025; The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025). • Newt Gingrich, Former U.S. Speaker: “This is suffocating political and religious suppression. It’s an attack on all people of faith worldwide. President Lee, end this now.” (Fox News, October 2025; The Monarch Report, October 12; Chosun Ilbo, September 18, 2025; October 26, 2025). • Dr. Massimo Introvigne, FOREF Europe Director: “This is not anti-corruption—it is a purge. A religiocide disguised as justice. The world demands Dr. Han's release.” (Bitter Winter, October 2025; October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025). • Demian Dunkley, Family Federation USA President: “The indictment and detention of Dr. Hak Ja Han places South Korea on the wrong side of history. This persecution must end—release her for the sake of global peace.” (PR Newswire, October 10, 2025; X @FamilyFedUsa, October 7, 10; October 19 update on cell conditions; October 26, 2025). • Oh Kwang-soo, Former Civil Affairs Chief (Legal Team): “I cannot stand by while the nation's spiritual backbone is broken. This is unjust persecution—release her to preserve Korea's democracy.” (Korea JoongAng Daily, October 2025; October 26, 2025). • Rev. Luke Higuchi, Japanese Pastor: “Even experts now call this a disgrace to democracy and religious freedom. Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon deserves honor, not prison.” (X Post, October 12; October 25, 2025). • Nina Urbonya, Pastor/Artist: “The world is watching. Rise up for freedom!! We ask for the immediate release of Dr. Hak Ja Han.” (X Post, October 10; October 25, 2025). • Fortune Winter, KWF Founder/CEO: “The real change begins within. Let’s lead with love. Release the Mother of Peace.” (X Post, October 6 & 10; October 2, prayer quote from Dr. Moon; October 23, 2025). • Marco Respinti, Journalist: “Mrs. Hak Ja Han... has been arrested... Outrageous, unprecedented, and quite sad. Prayers.” (X Post, September 22; October 24, 2025). • UPF Statement: “Deeply concerned by the detention of co-founder Dr. Hak Ja Han... This is a violation of religious freedom.” (UPF.org, September 26, 2025; October 25, 2025). • Ban Ki-moon, Former UN Secretary-General: Lauded Dr. Moon's peace efforts at 2025 World Summit, co-chaired with her, for reunification and harmony (UPF.org, 2025; October 26, 2025). • Hun Sen, Former Cambodian PM: Co-hosted 2022 Summit, highlighting her humanitarian legacy (UPF.org; October 24, 2025). • Additional Voices: The Washington Times (October 10; October 22, 2025, on Christian leaders detained without conviction; October 24, 2025, on health concerns; October 26, 2025) echoes release calls as religious freedom violation; World News Group (October 10; October 26, 2025) condemns overreach; Amnesty urges compliance; Dr. Alexandre Mansourov, North Korea expert, speculates Kim Jong-un may demand release, calling it a "disgrace" (Washington Times, October 2025; October 26, 2025). Interfaith Detroit leaders (October 17; October 23, 2025); Korean Christian Leadership Conference (KCLC): "Release Hak Ja Han—violation of religious freedom!" (Monarch Report, October 17; October 23, 2025). Muslim Women Raise Global Alarm: “We urge the South Korean government to uphold international human rights standards and release Dr. Hak Ja Han” (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; NatLawReview, October 21, 2025; October 26, 2025). USICRM: “South Korea Arrests ‘Mother Moon’: Global Faith Community Calls for Truth and Justice” (USICRM.org, October 13, 2025; October 25, 2025). American Pastor Rob McCoy briefed Trump, Vance, Johnson on parallel persecution of Rev. Son (X @monarchreport25, October 18; October 22, 2025, on Unification Church response to MBC; October 23, 2025). These endorsements, amplified in Associated Press (October 9-10; October 26, 2025), UPF, FOREF Europe (September 22; October 25, 2025), and Religion Media Centre (October 20, 2025; October 25, 2025), position this as a watershed human rights crisis, with leaders warning of fallout if unresolved. We implore media, society, and all sectors to champion a fair understanding rooted in facts and truth, combating distortions that fuel injustice and standing with Holy Mother Han as the sole holifier with Highest God’s direct Holiness for all Koreans and 8B+ God’s children—humanity.

Since its inception in 1954 in war-torn Seoul by Rev. Sun Myung Moon amid the Korean War's devastation—where North Korean invasions left millions dead, displaced, and the economy in ruins—the Unification Church (now FFWPU) has served as an indispensable cornerstone of South Korea's resilience, miraculous economic rise, cultural renaissance, national security, and global influence, contributing trillions in value through direct investments, ideological fortification, and peace diplomacy. Born from Rev. Moon's five-year survival in North Korean labor camps, it evolved into a global force for anti-communism, societal rebuilding, and harmony, aiding Korea and the world in multifaceted ways: • Anti-Communism and National Defense: Rev. Moon's experiences fueled a robust defense against communism; the 1975 Yeouido rally mobilized 1.2 million, reinforcing South Korea's ideological barriers during the Cold War; the 1968 International Federation for Victory Over Communism (IFVOC) educated millions on threats, preventing subversion in Korea, Japan, and Latin America, supporting Park Chung-hee's stabilization, and influencing U.S.-Korea alliances (Wikipedia, Britannica, APJJF.org, Nippon.com, The Diplomat, January 19, 2023; The Monarch Report, October 11, 2025, on surviving camps with love; October 23, 2025). CAUSA initiatives aided democratic transitions in Central/South America. • Economic and Media Contributions: Investments in Segye Ilbo, Tongil Group conglomerates (machinery, tourism, exports creating thousands of jobs), and educational institutions like Sun Moon University—fostering global leaders since 1994—propelled the Han River Miracle; globally, The Washington Times (1982) shaped anti-communist policies, democracy promotion, and U.S.-Korea ties, while business ventures generated billions in revenue for Korea's industrialization (FamilyFed.org, ResearchGate, EBSCO; UPI, October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025, on expansion). • Cultural Diplomacy: The Little Angels Children's Folk Ballet (1962) toured 60+ countries, promoting Korean heritage, earning UN accolades, and enhancing soft power; mass blessings united diverse couples, advancing interracial harmony and UN SDGs (UPF.org, ReligionFacts.com; October 25, 2025). • Pioneering Peace Efforts: UPF and WFWP (UN ECOSOC status) mediate conflicts; Rev. Moon's 1991 Kim Il-sung summit pioneered North-South dialogue pre-official channels, laying reunification foundations; recent movements rallied 20,000+ for peace (GlobalPeace.org, November 2, 2023; CS.Cornell.edu, FCCJ.or.jp; X @YoungWinterSoon, October 22, 2025, on peace vision; The Monarch Report, October 23, 2025, on Gorbachev meeting). • Humanitarian Impact: Trillions in aid for disasters (COVID-19 vaccines to millions, 2011 Japan tsunami reconstruction, Hurricane Katrina relief), education in Africa/Asia (schools for 100,000+ children), post-war Korean rebuilding, environmental initiatives (tree-planting campaigns covering millions of hectares), women's empowerment (training 500,000+ leaders), and youth programs (intercultural exchanges for 1 million+ participants) (FamilyFedIHQ.org, TParents.org; X @musk_1300, October 19, on peace movement for equality; October 26, 2025). From 1960 to 2025, Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon has toured Korea annually, empowering women through WFWP seminars in cities like Seoul, Busan, Daegu, Incheon, Gwangju, Daejeon, Ulsan, and Jeju, reaching over 1 million participants with programs on leadership, economic independence, and gender equality; strengthening families in rural villages like those in Gangwon, Chungcheong, Jeolla, and Gyeongsang provinces with marriage education, community support, and anti-poverty initiatives that lifted thousands from hardship; and inspiring youth in universities like Sun Moon, Seoul National, Yonsei, Korea University, KAIST, POSTECH, and regional campuses with lectures on ethical leadership, global citizenship, innovation, and peacebuilding, fostering generations of thinkers who contributed to Korea's tech boom (e.g., alumni in Samsung R&D), cultural exports (K-pop collaborations), and economic growth (startups valued at billions) (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 20, 2025, Hyojeong Briefing; UPF.org; October 26, 2025). Persecuting Dr. Moon dismantles this legacy, potentially isolating Korea economically (lost investments from church networks spanning 194 countries), diplomatically (strained U.S. ties amid $150B+ trade), and spiritually, as analysts warn in The Diplomat (January 19, 2023; October 26, 2025) and Nippon.com (October 23, 2025).

President Lee Jae-myung, your visionary progressive agenda—centered on equity, anti-corruption, social welfare, gender equality, and national reconciliation—uniquely positions you to rectify this injustice, forging an immortal legacy as a compassionate reformer. Releasing Dr. Moon harmonizes with your principles, averts disaster, amplifies your leadership, pleases your base, and garners global acclaim. Consider these 150 interconnected, logically sequenced arguments for her immediate release, building from humanitarian urgency to strategic global benefits, each reinforcing why this decision will please you and secure Korea's future:

  1. Humanitarian Imperative to Avert Tragedy: At 83, post-heart surgery, with symptoms like dark circles, dry skin, red face, and painkiller reliance after 34 days, detention risks lethal elder abuse, violating Welfare of Senior Citizens Act Article 2(4), 39-2, and Constitution Article 34(5). Release exemplifies your welfare focus, averting scandal (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  2. Constitutional and Legal Compliance: Rampant breaches (Articles 10, 12, 20) undermine rule of law; invoke Criminal Procedure Act Articles 93, 95, 94, 97, 100, 104, 92, 243, 89, 309 for release, shielding from ICCPR sanctions and aligning with your anti-corruption ethos (Bitter Winter, October 11, 2025; October 21, 2025).
  3. Political Reconciliation and Unity: Probe fuels divisions; liberation heals, fulfilling your cohesion pledges and diffusing unrest from vigils (Korea JoongAng Daily, October 15, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  4. Safeguarding International Alliances: Condemnations from Trump, Pompeo, Gingrich threaten U.S.-Korea pacts, trade ($150B+ annual), security; free her to strengthen diplomacy, especially DPRK talks (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  5. Economic Safeguard and Expansion: FFWPU's investments drive prosperity; persecution deters capital—release reaffirms freedom, boosting tourism, exports, partnerships (UPI, October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  6. Spiritual Providence and National Blessing: Rejecting the Mother of Peace invites indemnity; embracing averts misfortune, resonating with Korea's heritage (X @FortuneWinter, October 2, 2025; October 23, 2025).
  7. Harnessing Public Momentum: Thousands at vigils, 300+ pastors October 19, hundreds of thousands globally—release transforms energy into societal good, elevating popularity (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 14, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  8. Justice System Reform Benchmark: Anti-graft laudable, but faith-targeting erodes credibility; drop charges per journalistic exposures, setting impartiality precedent (Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025).
  9. Advancing Peninsula Reunification: Her UPF/WFWP pivotal for dialogue—detention obstructs; freedom accelerates, aiding your goals (The Monarch Report, October 11, 2025; October 23, 2025).
  10. Moral Leadership Embodiment: Championing vulnerability by freeing a peace icon inspires, cementing legacy as defender of the oppressed (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  11. Zero Risk Assessment: No flight/tampering for health-impaired elder per Criminal Procedure Act Article 95—logical bail grounds (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  12. Evading Global Consequences: Violations risk sanctions, isolation per Amnesty/U.S. reports—release elevates human rights stature (October 26, 2025 updates).
  13. Historical Alignment: Reversing Park-era church alliance courts downfall; restore to honor past, secure future (The Diplomat, January 19, 2023; October 26, 2025).
  14. Health Policy Synergy: Prioritizing seniors contradictory to detention—rectify per Constitution Article 36(3) (Premier Christian News, October 23, 2025; October 25, 2025).
  15. International Law Fulfillment: ICCPR breaches invite scrutiny—compliance boosts UN standing (Bitter Winter, October 11, 2025; October 21, 2025).
  16. Interfaith Harmony Promotion: Persecuting unifier contradicts inclusivity; release fosters tolerance (X @musk_1300, October 19; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
  17. Economic Ripple Benefits: Church networks aid exports, diplomacy—suppression harms; freedom enhances.
  18. Social Stability Prevention: Vigils could escalate—release peacefully diffuses (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  19. Mercy Legacy Building: Compassion over vendetta remembered—invoke mercy petitions.
  20. Truth Unveiling: Media facts confirm innocence, coerced evidence—release restores justice (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 20, 2025, Hyojeong Briefing on no involvement; October 26, 2025).
  21. Gender Equity Advancement: Detaining female leader contradicts Constitution Article 34(3)—release champions women (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
  22. Environmental/Health Integration: Conditions violate Article 35(1)—freedom upholds policies.
  23. Family Protection Reinforcement: Attacking family faith breaches Article 36(1)—liberation supports initiatives.
  24. Democratic Credibility Enhancement: Ending "religiocide" counters overreach perceptions (Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025).
  25. Global Investment Leverage: Networks in 194 countries foster inflows—release aids equity goals.
  26. Human Rights Model Setting: Align with U.S./Amnesty calls, positioning Korea as leader (October 26, 2025).
  27. North Korea Escalation Avoidance: Detention complicates reunification—freedom removes barrier (The Monarch Report, October 11, 2025; October 23, 2025).
  28. Public Trust Rebuilding: Addressing prosecutorial flaws rebuilds system faith (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  29. Intergenerational Equity: Protecting elder precedents aging society per Welfare Act.
  30. Transformative Crisis Resolution: Turn scandal to triumph, embodying progressive values.
  31. Coercive Practice Countering: Echoes de-conversions (HRWF 2020)—release halts pattern.
  32. Soft Power Amplification: Peace rallies enhance image—persecution diminishes.
  33. UN Commitment Alignment: Violates ICCPR Article 18—release reaffirms.
  34. Diplomatic Embarrassment Prevention: Trump's APEC intervention (October 29) pressure—proactive release averts.
  35. Women's Leadership Empowerment: As WFWP founder, empowers globally—detention contradicts (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  36. Reunification Momentum: 1991 summit pioneered—free to resume (The Monarch Report, October 11, 2025; October 23, 2025).
  37. Investment Stability: Tongil Group bolstered industrialization—suppression risks flight.
  38. International Goodwill Leverage: Endorsements from Ban, Hun Sen boost agenda (October 26, 2025).
  39. Health Crisis Mitigation: Conditions worsen diabetes/arrhythmia—release prevents disaster per Article 89 (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  40. Unity Legacy: End revenge cycles—symbolize reconciliation.
  41. Religious Discrimination Cessation: Breaches Article 11(1)—release ends targeting (The Economist, October 17, 2025; October 25, 2025).
  42. Humane Treatment Enforcement: Violates Article 12(6)—immediate conditions improvement or release.
  43. Petition Right Uphold: Ignoring appeals breaches Article 26(1)—respond with mercy.
  44. Vulnerable Protection: Fails Criminal Procedure Act Article 163-2—treat as vulnerable.
  45. Wrongful Detention Compensation: Grounds under Article 198—prevent by release.
  46. Power Abuse Prohibition: Prosecutors violate Criminal Act Article 123—investigate, release victim.
  47. Religious Practice Guarantee: Breaches Enforcement Decree Article 12—allow faith or free.
  48. Elderly Health Promotion: Contradicts Framework Act on Health Article 7—prioritize welfare.
  49. Global Peace Contribution Recognition: Her legacy aids Korea—persecution ungrateful; release honors (X @YoungWinterSoon, October 22; The Monarch Report, October 23, 2025).
  50. Ultimate Presidential Wisdom: Freeing her pleases all—base, world, history—securing eternal acclaim.
  51. Media Integrity Restoration: Daily prosecutor leaks of false info violate Prosecutors' Office Act Article 4; release counters defamation, rebuilding trust (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  52. University Projects Vindication: Invented fakes on Sun Moon University embezzlement breach Criminal Act Article 126; truth revelation protects educational legacy (Hyojeong Briefing, October 20, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  53. Global Prayer Momentum: Hundreds of thousands praying worldwide amplify unity—release channels this for national healing (X @FortuneWinter, October 6; October 23, 2025).
  54. Anti-Communism Legacy: Church's IFVOC fortified Korea; persecution erodes this, release preserves (The Monarch Report, October 11, 2025; October 23, 2025).
  55. Economic Contributions: Tongil Group's jobs/economy boosted Miracle on Han; freedom sustains (UPI, October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  56. Cultural Soft Power: Little Angels promoted Korea globally; detention tarnishes, release revives.
  57. Humanitarian Aid Recognition: Billions in global relief from church; release honors this service.
  58. Interfaith Bridge-Building: UPF's dialogues foster peace; freedom continues this (X @musk_1300, October 19; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
  59. Youth Empowerment: Programs for millions; persecution halts, release empowers future (Hyojeong Briefing, October 20, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  60. Providential Alignment: As Only Begotten Daughter, her role holifies humanity; release fulfills divine will, pleasing all (X @13chi31, October 20; The Monarch Report, October 23, 2025).
  61. Interconnected Elder Rights: Linking health violations to welfare acts reinforces comprehensive protection, urging holistic release.
  62. Diplomatic Synergy: Freeing her aligns with U.S. alliances, preventing trade fallout and enhancing your international stature (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  63. Anti-Corruption Purity: Dropping bogus charges purifies your agenda from perceived bias, strengthening credibility (Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; October 21, 2025).
  64. Reunification Catalyst: Her past summits with North Korea pave ways; release reignites progress toward your unification vision (The Monarch Report, October 11, 2025; October 23, 2025).
  65. Public Sentiment Boost: Global and local prayers convert to support for your leadership upon release (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  66. Judicial Reform Opportunity: Addressing overreach sets precedent for fair trials under your administration (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  67. Economic Multiplier: Church's global networks amplify Korea's exports; freedom secures ongoing benefits.
  68. Humanitarian Legacy: Aligning with her aid efforts elevates your welfare policies.
  69. Interfaith Unity: Release fosters tolerance, pleasing diverse constituencies (Premier Christian News, October 23, 2025; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
  70. Strategic Avoidance of Sanctions: Prevents UN/ICCPR backlash, safeguarding economy.
  71. Media Truth Promotion: Counters leaks, restoring factual discourse (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  72. Educational Vindication: Protects university projects, supporting youth development (Hyojeong Briefing, October 20, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  73. Prayer Power Harness: Channels global devotion into national harmony (X @FortuneWinter, October 2; October 23, 2025).
  74. Anti-Communism Reinforcement: Preserves historical fortifications against threats (The Monarch Report, October 11, 2025; October 23, 2025).
  75. Miracle on Han Sustainment: Maintains economic contributions from church enterprises (UPI, October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  76. Soft Power Revival: Revives cultural diplomacy like Little Angels.
  77. Relief Aid Honor: Acknowledges billions in global humanitarian work.
  78. Peace Dialogue Continuation: Enables ongoing interfaith bridges (X @YoungWinterSoon, October 22; The Monarch Report, October 23, 2025).
  79. Future Generations Empowerment: Ensures youth programs thrive.
  80. Divine and Political Harmony: Fulfills providential role while pleasing your progressive base (X @13chi31, October 20; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
  81. Parallel Persecution Halt: Like Rev. Son's 50-day detention, end weaponizing justice against conservatives (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  82. International Religious Freedom Boost: Aligns with U.S. Ambassador nominee Mark Walker's focus (X @aliwill1955, October 22; October 25, 2025).
  83. Bias in Media Counter: Addresses MBC documentary's emotional bias without church voices (X @seeking12gates, October 22, 2025; FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  84. Family Unity Preservation: Protects great-grandmother from separation, per Healthy Family Act (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025, grandsons on family concerns; October 26, 2025).
  85. Global Muslim Support Leverage: Muslim women's alarm (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025) boosts interfaith ties.
  86. Christian Solidarity: Parallels with detained pastors demand consistent release (Premier Christian News, October 23, 2025; October 25, 2025).
  87. Economic Isolation Prevention: Avoids investor flight from "purge" perceptions (Trump X, October 12, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  88. Human Rights Report Alignment: Rectifies U.S. State Dept concerns on arbitrary detention (2025 update).
  89. Amnesty Compliance: Averts criticism on human rights violations.
  90. UN Human Rights Appeal: Responds to universal rights calls (X @UN, October 21; @UN_HRC, October 21; October 26, 2025).
  91. Interfaith Detroit Model: Builds on U.S. letters for global pressure (X @MoffittKaeleigh, October 17; October 20, 2025).
  92. Grandson Testimony Integration: Channels family appeals for unity (X @monarchreport25, October 22, 2025; The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  93. Revenge Politics End: Breaks cycle, per historical analysis (X @monarchreport25, October 18; October 23, 2025).
  94. Pastor McCoy Briefing: Heeds U.S. leaders' rally against persecution (X @monarchreport25, October 18; October 23, 2025).
  95. Japanese Support: Amplifies international voices (X @uc2seibanzai, October 20; October 25, 2025).
  96. Veteran Solidarity: Honors anti-communist legacy (X @DooseJohnD84208, October 21; October 25, 2025).
  97. UN Torture Report Response: Counters ill-treatment (USCIRF, October 20, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  98. Cambodian Contrast: Highlights double standards in warrants (X @JohnAbelseth, October 21; October 25, 2025).
  99. Providential Forgiveness: Embraces love to stop revenge (X @AnyaChen52, October 18; October 25, 2025).
  100. Eternal Legacy: Pleases all by freeing her, securing peace and acclaim.
  101. Prosecutorial Misconduct Cessation: Daily false leaks by Choi Jae-hyeon on projects like Mekong violate Criminal Act Article 126—release ends defamation (Bitter Winter, October 10, 2025; Hyojeong Briefing, October 20, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  102. Health Deterioration Prevention: Grandsons warn of worsening blindness, mobility—release aligns with elder care policies (The Washington Times, October 24, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  103. Parallel Religious Repression Halt: Like Rev. Son's moldy cell suffering, end targeting (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  104. Broadcast Bias Counter: MBC's unverified claims without church input—release promotes fair media (FamilyFedIHQ.org, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  105. Women's Empowerment Legacy: Her annual tours since 1960 empowered women in cities/villages—persecution erodes, release revives (Hyojeong Briefing, October 20, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  106. Family Strengthening Impact: Village programs built stable families—freedom continues this.
  107. Youth University Inspiration: Lectures at universities like Sun Moon fostered leaders—release protects education (October 26, 2025).
  108. Anti-Communism Victory Honor: Survived camps, embraced enemies with love—release honors resilience (The Monarch Report, October 11, 2025; October 23, 2025).
  109. Economic Miracle Contribution: Church investments in Tongil Group aided growth—suppression harms, freedom sustains.
  110. Cultural Export Boost: Little Angels elevated K-culture—release enhances soft power.
  111. Humanitarian Global Reach: Aid to billions in disasters—persecution ungrateful, release acknowledges.
  112. Interfaith Dialogue Continuation: UPF summits bridged divides—detention blocks, freedom enables (X @YoungWinterSoon, October 22; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
  113. Reunification Pioneering: 1991 summit groundwork—release advances your vision (The Monarch Report, October 23, 2025).
  114. Prayer Unity Harness: 300 pastors, thousands at center, global masses—channel for reconciliation (X @MoffittKaeleigh, October 20, 2025).
  115. Muslim Interfaith Support: Women's alarm strengthens alliances—release pleases diverse groups (EIN Presswire, October 21, 2025; AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
  116. Christian Parallel Justice: Rev. Son's case demands equity—end selective persecution (Premier Christian News, October 23, 2025; October 25, 2025).
  117. Investor Confidence Restoration: Avoids "purge" label, securing economy (The Washington Times, October 22, 2025; October 26, 2025).
  118. Human Rights Elevation: Aligns with global calls, boosting prestige.
  119. Amnesty Avoidance: Prevents further reports on repression.
  120. Ultimate Equity Act: Freeing her pleases progressives by protecting minorities, sealing your legacy.
  121. Regional Empowerment Synergy: Aligns with your Daegu focus by honoring local faith contributions (X @Jaemyung_Lee, October 25, 2025).
  122. Tourism Boost: Her peace parks like Mekong attract visitors—release revives.
  123. Tech Innovation Link: University alumni in Samsung—freedom supports growth.
  124. K-Culture Harmony: Blessings promoted unity—release enhances exports.
  125. Disaster Aid Continuity: Church's global relief—detention halts, freedom resumes.
  126. Youth Ethics Education: University lectures built leaders—release inspires.
  127. Anti-Poverty Legacy: Women's programs lifted villages—persecution ignores, release celebrates.
  128. Family Stability Promotion: Rural initiatives strengthened society—freedom upholds.
  129. Gorbachev Meeting Honor: Historic peace diplomacy—release preserves.
  130. North-South Dialogue Revival: 1991 summit legacy—detention blocks, freedom enables (The Monarch Report, October 23, 2025).
  131. Interfaith Prayer Amplification: This week's vigils unite faiths—release harnesses (AMMWEC, October 23, 2025).
  132. Muslim Solidarity Boost: Global alarm builds alliances—pleases inclusivity base.
  133. Pastor Solidarity Equity: Parallel cases like Son—end all for justice.
  134. Purge Perception Counter: Trump's warning—release restores confidence.
  135. State Dept Alignment: Addresses 2025 concerns on freedom.
  136. Amnesty Report Prevention: Halts repression critiques.
  137. UN HRC Response: Answers calls for rights (October 26, 2025).
  138. Detroit Interfaith Model: Expands U.S. support—strengthens ties.
  139. Family Testimony Channel: Grandsons' appeals humanize—release unites.
  140. Historical Cycle Break: Ends revenge, per analyses.
  141. U.S. Briefing Heed: McCoy's Trump update—proactive release.
  142. Japanese Voice Amplification: International endorsements grow.
  143. Veteran Legacy Honor: Anti-communism resilience celebrated.
  144. Torture Counter: UN reports on treatment—release complies.
  145. Warrant Standards: Cambodian contrasts highlight bias.
  146. Forgiveness Embrace: Providential love stops cycles.
  147. APEC Diplomacy: Prevents embarrassment at summits.
  148. Elder Care Precedent: Sets positive for aging society.
  149. Global Aclaim Secure: Pleases all stakeholders.
  150. Divine Destiny Fulfillment: Releases holifier, securing blessings for Korea and humanity.

Korea faces a destiny-altering choice: pariah or paragon? President Lee Jae-myung, honor the Constitution with compassion: • Order Immediate, Unconditional Release of Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon on humanitarian, health, legal grounds, invoking Constitution Articles 10, 34, 36, and Criminal Procedure Act Articles 93, 95, 92, 94, 97, 100, 104, 243, 89, 309. • Halt All Politically Motivated Religious Persecutions, protecting Articles 11, 20. • Guarantee Fair, Public Trials upholding innocence presumption (Article 27(4)). • Counter Misinformation: Urge media/society to promote fact-based understanding, standing to Release Immediately Holy Mother Han as the holifier with Highest God’s direct Holiness for all Koreans & 8B+ God’s children—humanity.

True peace blooms in the Mother of Peace's embrace. Shun religious persecution as an indelible stain on posterity. Answer history's summons for Global Peace!

RELEASE NOW, PRESIDENT LEE JAE-MYUNG! FREE HAK JA HAN MOON! UNLEASH KOREA'S DIVINE DESTINY!

With profound urgency, steadfast respect, and collective prayers, Nicolae Cirpala President, Global Peace Building Network (GPBNet) | Happy TV News +79056333606

SOURCES: Korea JoongAng Daily (October 15, 2025; October 26, 2025) | UPI News (October 10, 2025; October 26, 2025) | The Independent | Happy TV News (Oct 22, 2025; October 26, 2025) | Channel A News (October 17, 2025; October 26, 2025) | TV Chosun (October 17, 2025; October 26, 2025) | The Economist (October 17, 2025; October 25, 2025) | Monthly Chosun (October 2025) | Al Jazeera (Sept 23, 2025; October 26, 2025) | The Hindu (Sept 18, 2025; October 24, 2025) | The Korea Herald (October 15, 2025; October 26, 2025) | The Washington Stand (Oct 2025; October 25, 2025) | Bitter Winter (October 7, 10, 11, 21, 2025) | UPF.org (September 26, 2025; October 25, 2025) | The Straits Times (October 24, 2025) | Yahoo News Canada (Oct 10, 2025) | Associated Press (Oct 9, 10, 26, 2025) | The Guardian (Sept 23, 2025; October 25, 2025) | Jurist.org | Chosun Ilbo (Oct 10, 17, 26, 2025) | PR Newswire (Sept 17, Oct 10, 2025) | motherofpeace.com (Oct 1, Sept 22, 25, 2025) | Nikkei Asia (Sept 25, 2025; October 23, 2025) | Reuters (Oct 10, 26, 2025) | The Washington Times (Oct 10, 22, 24, 26, 2025) | World News Group (Oct 10, 26, 2025) | New Haven Register (Oct 10, 2025) | Wikipedia | Britannica | EBSCO | TParents.org | ResearchGate | APJJF | CS.Cornell.edu | FCCJ.or.jp | FamilyFed.org | FamilyFedIHQ.org (October 14, 15, 22, 26, 2025) | South China Morning Post (October 24, 2025) | ABC News (October 9, 2025; October 26, 2025) | Religion News Service (September 17, 2025; October 25, 2025) | Nippon.com (October 23, 2025) | Amnesty International Reports (2023-2025; October 26, 2025) | U.S. State Department Human Rights Reports (2023-2025) | elaw.klri.re.kr (Constitution and Laws) | The New York Times (September 23, 2025; October 25, 2025) | The Diplomat (January 19, 2023; October 26, 2025) | FOREF Europe (September 22, 2025; October 25, 2025) | The Monarch Report (October 12, 18, 23, 2025) | Instagram/FamilyFedUSA (September 26, 2025) | X Posts (@MoffittKaeleigh October 17-20, 2025; @Bonolv15 October 16, 2025; @FortuneWinter October 15, 23, 2025; @ammwecofficial October 23, 2025) | Yonhap News (October 17, 26, 2025) | HRWF.eu (September 20, 2025; October 25, 2025) | GlobalPeace.org (November 2, 2023) | BBC (September 22, 2025; October 24, 2025) | Religion Media Centre (October 20, 2025; October 25, 2025) | TheBlueHouseENG (Various, 2020-2021) | CNN (March 6, 2020; September 22, 2025; October 25, 2025) | EIN Presswire (October 21, 26, 2025) | USICRM.org (October 13, 2025; October 25, 2025) | Courthouse News Service (October 2025; October 26, 2025) | Premier Christian News (October 23, 25, 2025) | AllKpop (October 22, 25, 2025) | NatLawReview (October 21, 2025) | The Business Times (September 22, 2025; October 26, 2025) | Newsday (October 10, 25, 2025)

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