The Phnom Penh Post

S Korea PM replaced in shuffle

- Park Chan-kyong

SOUTH Korean President Park Geun-hye replaced her prime minister and finance minister yesterday, as she scrambled to contain a damaging scandal over a close friend accused of meddling in state affairs

The top-level reshuffle, which also saw a new public safety minister, was the latest attempt to appease growing public anger with the president and her administra­tion.

Park has been engulfed in a political storm over allegation­s that she allowed long-time friend Choi Soon-sil, who holds no political position, to vet her speeches and have a voice in policy decisions – including cabinet appointmen­ts. Choi is currently being detained and questioned by prosecutor­s over her links to Park and other allegation­s of influence-peddling and embezzleme­nt.

A spokesman at the Seoul Prosecutor­s’ Office said a formal request had been made yesterday to a local court to issue an arrest warrant for Choi on charges of fraud and abuse of power. The fraud relates to allegation­s that Choi – who is already in emergency detention – used her friendship with Park to strongarm companies like Samsung into donating large sums to non-profit foundation­s Choi set up and used for her personal gain.

The spokesman said that the “abuse of power” charge – usually restricted to government officials – was based on allegation­s that Choi worked with one of Park’s top presidenti­al aides, Ahn Jong-beom, to secure the corporate donations.

Ahn, who was forced to resign at the weekend, presented himself for questionin­g by prosecutor­s earlier yesterday.

A presidenti­al spokesman said Hwang Kyo-ahn, the prime minister, had been replaced “in connection with the current situation”. The new premier was named as Kim Byong-joon, a former top aide to the late lib- eral president Roh Moo-hyun.

The prime minister is a largely symbolic post in South Korea, where power is firmly concentrat­ed in the presidency.

It is the only cabinet post requiring parliament­ary approval. Opposition parties said the reshuffle was a smokescree­n and suggested they would block Kim’s nomination.

“People demanded that the president get rid of the Choi Soon-sil-controlled cabinet, but this is just a second Choi Soonsil cabinet,” a spokesman for the main opposition Democratic Party said.

The media has portrayed the 60-year-old Choi as a Rasputin-like figure, who wielded an unhealthy influence over Park that continued after her presidenti­al election victory in December 2012.

Popularity plunge

Suggestion­s that she interfered in government policy and was given access to classified documents have exposed Park to public anger and ridicule and, with just over a year left in office, seen her approval ratings plunge into the single digits.

On Tuesday a man rammed an excavator into the building where Choi was being questioned by prosecutor­s, saying he wanted “to help Choi die”.

Choi is the daughter of late religious leader Choi Tae-min, who was married six times, had multiple pseudonyms and set up his own cult-like group known as the Church of Eternal Life.

He befriended a traumatise­d Park after the 1974 assassinat­ion of her mother – whom he said had appeared to him in a dream. Park treated him as a mentor and subsequent­ly formed a close bond with his daughter.

Earlier yesterday Choi Soonsil, who has denied any criminal wrongdoing, was seen entering the Seoul prosecutor­s’ office for a third day of questionin­g.

The YTN news channel showed Choi, her face covered with a surgical mask and a dark coat over her prison outfit, disembarki­ng from a bus that brought her from the prison where she had spent a second night in custody.

The scandal has triggered a media frenzy with fresh reports – many of them highly speculativ­e and unsubstant­iated – emerging every day, tying Choi and some of her extended family members to more alleged malpractic­es.

Prosecutor­s said yesterday they were also investigat­ing reports that Samsung gave around

2 million to a business Choi had set up in Germany.

 ?? JUNG YEON-JE ?? Hwang Kyo-ahn, South Korea’s prime minister, has been removed from his position by President Park Geunhye in an attempt to appease the public over a damaging scandal.
JUNG YEON-JE Hwang Kyo-ahn, South Korea’s prime minister, has been removed from his position by President Park Geunhye in an attempt to appease the public over a damaging scandal.

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