The Korea Times

New allegation hits foreign minister nominee

- By Choi Ha-young hayoung.choi@ktimes.com

Foreign Minister nominee Kang Kyung-wha faces a new allegation that her former subordinat­e at the United Nations has been involved in her daughter’s business.

Rep. Lee Tae-kyu of the People’s Party claimed a U.N. staffer surnamed Woo, who worked for the Office of the U.N. High Commission­er for Human Rights in Geneva under Kang’s supervisio­n, invested 40 million won ($35,590) in a firm owned by Kang’s eldest daughter Lee Hyun-ji.

Woo’s older brother also invested 20 million won in the firm. Last year, Kang’s daughter establishe­d the com- pany dealing with imported wine and cheese. The 60 million won from the Woo family accounted for 75 percent of the initial capital.

“Then-U. N. staff member Woo became intimate with the Kang family including her daughter, while staying in Geneva from 2007 to 2013,” a foreign ministry official said. “Keeping in touch with Woo, Lee Hyun-jin founded the company in cooperatio­n with the Woo brothers.”

The official added most of the invested money remained in a bank account, since the company has not yet started doing business.

On her way to work Tuesday, Kang told reporters she was not engaged in her daughter’s business.

As President Moon Jae-in’s Prime Minister-designate Lee Nak-yon is expected to get the National Assembly’s confirmati­on Wednesday following the concession of the People’s Party, Kang is likely to become the next target of the opposition parties’ political offensives.

After being tapped May 21, she has faced growing suspicions of corruption — false residence registrati­on and belated payment of gift taxes. Her two daughters paid 2.3 million won each in gift tax, two days after the nomination, for homes they pur- chased with Kang’s money.

She also drew flak for giving a false explanatio­n about her past wrongdoing­s. When Cheong Wa Dae appointed her, the presidenti­al office revealed she falsely registered her family’s address as a relative’s home, so her oldest daughter could attend Ewha Girl’s High School in 2000.

As her nomination was widely seen as a symbol of breaking the glass ceiling, public sentiment was positive, as the irregulari­ty was rampant back in the day and was not considered a serious illegality.

The career diplomat’s outstandin­g communicat­ion skills in the U.N. and forward-looking understand­ing on human rights were highly evaluated.

 ??  ?? Kang Kyung-wha
Kang Kyung-wha

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