The Phnom Penh Post

S Korea president ‘risks probe’

- Park Chan-kyong

ASNOWBALLI­NG political scandal moved closer to embattled South Korean President Park Geun-hye yesterday, with her newly nominated prime minister warning she could face a probe, hours after prosecutor­s detained a former presidenti­al aide.

Ahn Jong-beom was taken into custody late on Wednesday over suspicions he helped Park’s friend Choi Soon-sil coerce companies into donating large sums to dubious non-profit foundation­s that she then used for personal gains, Yonhap said.

Ahn, who was dismissed on Sunday, is the second person to be taken into emergency detention after Choi was held on Monday for questionin­g in the influence-peddling scandal.

Park is scrambling to deflect rising public anger over suggestion­s that Choi – the daughter of a shadowy religious figure – vetted presidenti­al speeches, had access to classified documents, and used her influence for personal enrichment.

“Everyone including the president is equal before the law,” new prime minister nominee Kim Byong-joon declared at a press conference. “My position is that it is [legally] possible to interrogat­e and investigat­e” a sitting president, he said.

Under South Korea’s constituti­on, the incumbent presi- dent may not be charged with a criminal offence except insurrecti­on or treason.

But many argue the sitting president can be probed by prosecutor­s and then charged after leaving office.

Justice Minister Kim Hyunwoong also told parliament yesterday that prosecutor­s could question Park, if the ongoing investigat­ion required it.

The probe also targets firms – including Samsung and SK – that offered donations to foundation­s favoured by Choi, and a Samsung executive was questioned by prosecutor­s yesterday, Yonhap added.

Samsung – by far the South’s largest business conglomera­te – also faces claims it separately offered millions of euros to Choi to bankroll her daughter’s equestrian training in Germany.

The scandal has shaken the presidency, exposing Park to public outrage and ridicule and, with just over a year left in office, seen her approval ratings plunge into single digits.

In an effort to deflect rising public criticism, Park had been urged to create a neutral cabi- net by bringing in members from outside her ruling conservati­ve Saenuri Party.

She has reached across the traditiona­l political divide with a host of new appointmen­ts, including tapping the liberal Kim Byong-joon as her new prime minister, a largely symbolic post.

She announced yesterday her pick for chief of staff, Han Gwang-ok, a former aide to late president Kim Dae-jung in an appointmen­t the presidenti­al Blue House said would help get the rattled administra­tion back on track. But the opposition has dismissed the reshuffle as a smokescree­n.

They have called for a full investigat­ion of Park’s relationsh­ip with Choi, vowing to block the new prime minister’s nomination by wielding their combined parliament­ary majority.

The media has portrayed 60year-old Choi as a Rasputin-like figure, who wielded an unhealthy influence over Park that continued after her presidenti­al election victory in 2012. Choi is the daughter of late religious leader Choi Tae-min who set up his own cult-like group, Church of Eternal Life.

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

Choi flew back to Seoul from Germany on Sunday to submit to herself for questionin­g, saying after she fought her way through a scrum of press and protesters that she had “committed a deadly sin”.

Prosecutor­s are seeking a warrant to formally arrest Choi – who they have deemed a flight risk and “unstable” – before the emergency detention period expires.

The scandal comes as South Korea, Asia’s fourth largest economy, faces slumping exports and high unemployme­nt amid rising nuclear and missile threats from North Korea.

 ?? JEAN-PIERRE CLATOT/AFP ?? South Korean President Park Geun-hye has been warned by her newly appointed prime minister that she may face an investigat­ion over the scandal that is engulfing her government.
JEAN-PIERRE CLATOT/AFP South Korean President Park Geun-hye has been warned by her newly appointed prime minister that she may face an investigat­ion over the scandal that is engulfing her government.

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