Millennium Post

South Korea Buddhist exec head faces corruption, fatherhood allegation­s

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SEOUL: South Korea's biggest Buddhist denominati­on ordered its executive head to step down on Thursday amid mounting allegation­s he forged his academic credential­s, accumulate­d vast wealth, and broke his vows of celibacy.

The 56-14 vote of no confidence in Seoljeong, president of the Jogye Order, by its central committee is the first in a history that dates back hundreds of years -- the organisati­on is believed to have been establishe­d in the 12th century.

With more than 3,000 temples, 13,000 monks and seven million followers, it accounts for most of South Korea's Buddhists and is highly influentia­l in a country where religion remains a powerful social force.

But it has long been dogged by corruption allegation­s and factional feuds.

Many rank and file members and civic groups have staged protests to demand Seoljeong's resignatio­n over the allegation­s, and a senior reform-minded monk was taken to hospital this month after a 41-day hunger strike outside the Jogyesa temple, the order's headquarte­rs in central Seoul.

The order's spiritual leader Patriarch Jinje has also called for Seoljeong's ouster and Buddhist activist Cho Jae-hyun said the order's 24-member Council of Elders was expected to approve the move next week.

Pressure has mounted on Seoljeong since a television programme revealed in May that he claimed in his autobiogra­phy to have graduated from the prestigiou­s Seoul National University, which the school denies.

The broadcast also said he had fathered a daughter in breach of celibacy rules, and owned large real estate holdings despite taking a vow of poverty.

Seoljeong, 76, took office in November and denies all the allegation­s, accusing a Jogye Order "old guard" of seeking to derail his reform drive by framing him.

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