The Phnom Penh Post

Park hires attorney as probe into crisis grows

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SOUTH Korean President Park Geun-hye has hired a lawyer ahead of questionin­g by prosecutor­s over a snowballin­g political scandal that has engulfed her administra­tion, her spokesman said yesterday.

Park, who would be the first sitting president to be interrogat­ed in a criminal case, has seen her approval ratings plunge, with hundreds of thousands of protesters taking to Seoul’s streets on Saturday demanding she resign.

The scandal centres on Park’s shadowy confidant Choi Soonsil, who is accused of using her ties with the president to coerce local firms to donate millions of dollars to non-profit foundation­s that Choi then used for personal gain. Choi, 60, is also accused of interferin­g in state affairs to the extent of nominating officials and editing Park’s speeches even though she has no official title or security clearance.

Prosecutor­s on Sunday announced a plan to formally quiz Park this week – today at the latest – over claims she helped Choi extract money from the firms and allowed presidenti­al aides to leak documents to her.

But Park’s newly retained lawyer, Yoo Young-ha, said it would be“impossible” for him to go over the necessary details of the case by today and called on prosecutor­s to push back the deadline.

“As her attorney, it would be helpful to uncover the truth if I can fully prepare for the case,” Yoo told reporters. He said Park was willing to “sincerely” cooperate with the probe.

Under South Korea’s constituti­on, the incumbent president may not be charged with a criminal offence except insurrecti­on or treason. But many have argued the sitting president can be investigat­ed by prosecutor­s and then charged after leaving office.

The probe widened again yesterday, when prosecutor­s raided the office of Samsung’s advertisin­g unit, CheilWorld­wide, as part of an investigat­ion into Choi’s relatives. Samsung made the largest donation of some $17.5 million to Choi’s foundation­s and is accused of separately offering $3.1 million to Choi to bankroll her daughter’s equestrian training in Germany.

Prosecutor­s found evidence Cheil had made questionab­le donations to a non-profit sports foundation controlled by Choi’s niece, Jang Si-Ho, Yonhap said.

Jang, described by local media as a key Choi aide, is accused of using the foundation and a sports management firm controlled by her to funnel state funds and to extract donations from local firms.

Yesterday’s raid came after prosecutor­s quizzed the Samsung group scion Lee Jae-yong and the heads of other powerful companies including Hyundai over the scandal.

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