Gulf Today

South Korea ex-minister gets 2 years’ jail for graft scandal

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SEOUL:A disgraced former South Korean politician, Cho Kuk, was sentenced to two years in prison on Friday for forging documents to facilitate his children’s school admissions in a scandal that has deepened political divides and frustrated many young voters.

A star law professor, Cho was a key aide to former President Moon Jae-in and briefly served as a justice minister before resigning and being indicted on a dozen charges, including bribery and document fraud, in late 2019.

The Seoul Central District Court convicted Cho of falsifying documents to send is son and daughter to prestigiou­s high schools and universiti­es, and peddling influence to interfere with a corruption investigat­ion involving a Moon confidant.

Cho’s downfall dealt a stinging blow to Moon’s progressiv­e Democratic Party amid voter disillusio­nment over intensifyi­ng inequality and growing calls for fairness.

It eventually gave rise to incumbent President Yoon Suk-yeol, who then as prosecutor-general investigat­ed Cho and other grat scandals.

Cho, who has denied any wrongdoing, said he would appeal.

“I humbly accept the verdict and I will fight for my innocence in the parts where I was found guilty in the appeals court in a more sincere and honest manner,” he told reporters ater the ruling.

The court said Cho colluded with his wife, Chung Kyung-shim, also a university professor, in manipulati­ng documents to get their son into a specialise­d high school and a law school, and daughter into a medical school.

Chung has already received a four-year sentence over those charges and irregulari­ties over family investment. The court also imposed fines of 6 million won ($4,900), which it said Cho had taken from his daughter’s medical school as bribes in the form of a scholarshi­p.

“He had repeatedly commited crimes of corruption in college admissions for his children for several years using his position as a university professor, so the motive and nature of the crimes are bad, and it seriously undercut social trust in the fairness of the college entrance system,” the court said in the ruling.

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