Millennium Post

Samsung heir becomes suspect in South Korea political scandal

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SEOUL: Samsung heir Lee Jae-yong has become a criminal suspect in a widening probe into the corruption and influence-peddlingsc­andal engulfing impeached South Korean President Park GeunHye, prosecutor­s said on Wednesday.

Lee, vice chairman of Samsung Electronic­s and the son of the Samsung Group chairman Lee Kun-hee, would be quizzed as a “suspect” in connection to bribery, prosecutor­s said.

“We have decided to question Lee on Thursday morning... as a suspect,” Lee Kyu-chul, spokesman for the team of special prosecutor­s investigat­ing the scandal, told reporters.

The affair centres on Park’s secret confidante Choi Soonsil, who is accused of using her ties to Park to coerce top firms into “donating” tens of millions of dollars to two non-profit foundation­s which Choi then used as her personal ATMS. Samsung was the biggest contributo­r to the foundation­s. It is also accused of separately giving millions of euros to Choi to bankroll her daughter’s equestrian training in Germany in a bid to curry favour.

Prosecutor­s have for months questioned Lee and other senior Samsung officials. The officials reportedly argued that although they were coerced to offer money, they sought no favours in return and thus the payments were not a bribe. Spokesman Lee said prosecutor­s “left open the possibilit­y” of formally arresting the Samsung scion later.

Prosecutor­s are investigat­ing whether Samsung bribed Choi in order to win state approval for a controvers­ial merger which it sought in 2015. The merger of two Samsung group units – Cheil Industries and Samsung C&T – was seen as a crucial step towards ensuring a smooth third-generation power transfer to Lee Jae-yong.

It was criticised by many, who said it wilfully undervalue­d Samsung C&T’S stocks. But the National Pension Service (NPS) – a major Samsung shareholde­r – voted in favour of the deal and it eventually went through.

Prosecutor­s have raided multiple Samsung offices as well as the NPS in connection with the scandal. The fund – the world’s third largest pension fund – is overseen by the welfare ministry. A former welfare minister was arrested last month for allegedly pressuring NPS officials to vote in favour of the Samsung deal.

Park, who stands accused of colluding with Choi to extract money from the firms, was impeached by parliament last month but denies any criminal wrongdoing.

 ??  ?? Samsung heir and vice chairman Lee Jae-yong has been named a criminal suspect in the scandal engulfing South Korean President Park Geun-hye
Samsung heir and vice chairman Lee Jae-yong has been named a criminal suspect in the scandal engulfing South Korean President Park Geun-hye

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