Categories: World

Fiji is deporting 6 leaders of South Korean sect that built business empire in the island country

close Video

Fox News Flash top headlines for September 7

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.

  • Fijian authorities have initiated the process of deporting six leaders associated with a South Korean religious sect, which relocated hundreds of its followers to Fiji a decade ago and established a vast array of businesses.
  • Only four of these leaders have been apprehended, while two, including senior director Daniel Kim, remain at large.
  • The impact of these deportations on the approximately 400 South Korean adherents and numerous local Fijians employed by Grace Road businesses remains uncertain.

Fijian authorities on Thursday said they were in the process of deporting six leaders of a South Korean religious sect that a decade ago moved hundreds of followers to Fiji and built a series of thriving businesses into an empire.

But authorities said they were only able to apprehend four of the principals of the Grace Road Church, and that senior director Daniel Kim and another man were on the run.

It’s unclear how the deportations will affect the estimated 400 South Korean adherents who remain in Fiji and the hundreds of local Fijians they employ. Grace Road businesses are prominent across the island country and include farms, restaurants, supermarkets, gas stations and dentists.

The sect first moved to Fiji under Daniel Kim’s mother, Shin Ok-ju, who told her followers that Fiji provided a safe haven from impending war and famine. She is currently imprisoned in South Korea after being found guilty of various crimes, including holding followers captive and assaulting them.

Fijian Immigration Minister Pio Tikoduadua told reporters they had successfully deported two of the six leaders back to South Korea while two more had challenged the action in court and had been temporarily released back to a Grace Road farm. He said one of those released was Grace Road’s acting president, Lee Sung Jin.

EXCLUSIVE ACCESS LUXURY BEACHSIDE RESORT IN FIJI AT CENTER OF TENNESSEE WOMAN’S HONEYMOON MURDER

Tikoduadua said that Fiji and South Korea don’t have a formal extradition treaty and the deportations — technically called removals — were carried out under his discretion. He said Interpol first issued red notices for the six in 2018 after South Korea had issued arrest warrants.

The move represented a change in attitude toward the sect’s leaders under Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka, who won election in December. Fiji’s previous leader, Frank Bainimarama, had embraced the economic successes of the church.

Fiji is deporting six leaders of a South Korean sect that built a business empire in the island country.  (Fox News)

Tikoduadua said the activities of Grace Road Church — which he described as a cult — had always been surrounded by controversy and that the previous government had chosen to ignore the Interpol notices.

“Grace Road as a company has invested heavily in Fiji. We recognize that and we appreciate that,” Tikoduadua said. “But that does not mean to say that things are not being questioned by everybody.”

He said he was currently focused only on the law as it related to the six people in question.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

In 2019, a South Korean court found that, in Fiji, Shin forced her followers to work without pay. The work included farming, hairdressing, construction, and restaurant services. They lived together at a facility that separated family members as well as men and women, the court found. Most of the devotee’s passports were confiscated.

Shin held a ritualistic event almost every day to get followers to beat each other in the name of “driving away evil spirits.”

The event required followers who allegedly criticized her church or made mistakes in their work to reflect on their behavior with their family members before other followers. After their self-reflection sessions, those family members were required to beat each other’s faces, and other followers sometimes beat them, according to the court ruling.

Shin was sentenced to six years imprisonment in 2019 for assault, fraud, aggravated confinement and child abuse. The term was raised to seven years in a second ruling, and in 2020, South Korea’s Supreme Court upheld the longer sentence.

Share

Recent Posts

Former ESPN personality Sage Steele denies Trump press secretary rumors

Sage Steele, the veteran sportscaster best known for her decade-plus career at ESPN, has shot down…

2 hours ago

Lara Trump says she’d ‘love to consider’ filling Rubio’s Senate seat if asked by DeSantis

Republican National Committee co-chair Lara Trump told FOX Business' Maria Bartiromo that she would "seriously…

2 hours ago

Florida burglary victim arrested after police find drugs during 911 response: ‘Should have hidden his cocaine’

close Video Florida sheriff shares how a victim who called 911 for help landed himself…

4 hours ago

Exoskeleton helps paralyzed people regain independence

Advancements in technology are continually reshaping the landscape of mobility aids, particularly for individuals with…

4 hours ago

Biden concludes foreign diplomacy in region where US influence overshadowed by China

In what could potentially be President Biden's last foreign diplomacy trip, he will soon head…

4 hours ago

Could Biden copy Obama with December surprise at UN to punish Israel’s Netanyahu?

close Video Cruz shreds Biden, Harris for being most ‘anti-Israel’ admin America has ever seen…

6 hours ago