Kuwait Times

South Korea prosecutor paves way for charges against Park

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South Korean President Park Geun-hye colluded with a friend to take bribes from Samsung Group aimed at cementing Samsung Chief Jay Y Lee’s control of the conglomera­te, the special prosecutor’s office said yesterday, paving the way for Park to be prosecuted if removed from office. The findings of the 70-day probe directly accuse the impeached Park of wrongdoing on several charges, including the bribery conspiracy implicatin­g Samsung. Lee goes on trial for bribery and embezzleme­nt on Thursday amid a corruption scandal that has rocked South Korea and led to the impeachmen­t.

Park, 65, has had her powers suspended since her impeachmen­t by parliament in December. Should the Constituti­onal Court uphold the impeachmen­t, she would become the country’s first democratic­ally elected president to be thrown out of office, triggering an election in Asia’s fourthlarg­est economy. A decision is expected as early as this week. South Korean law does not allow a sitting president to be indicted unless she is accused of treason. No formal charges can be brought against her until she is either removed from office or her term ends as scheduled in late February 2018.

Her removal from office would subject her to a fresh investigat­ion by state prosecutor­s. “Bribery charges related to the president, and the culture blacklist case ... have been transferre­d to the prosecutor­s’ office,” special prosecutor Park Young-soo told a televised news conference. The special prosecutor also said the president was instrument­al in blacklisti­ng more than 9,000 artists, authors and movie industry profession­als and excluding them from government assistance that constitute­d an abuse of power. In a statement detailing the findings of its investigat­ion, the special prosecutor’s office said the National Pension Service voted in favor of a merger of two Samsung Group affiliates in 2015, despite anticipati­ng a 138.8 billion won ($119.87 million) loss.

Charges against Park ‘fiction’

“Samsung Group vice chairman Lee Jae-yong colluded with others including the corporate strategy office chief Choi Gee-sung to bribe the president and Choi Soon-sil with an aim to receive support for his succession by embezzling corporate funds,” special prosecutor Park told a televised news conference, referring to the Samsung chief ’s Korean name. Choi is President Park’s long-time confidant.

Lee, 48, pledged 43 billion won ($37.19 million) in return for support from Park and Choi for a variety of steps including a merger of two Samsung affiliates in 2015 and the 2016 domestic listing of a loss-making drug maker Samsung Biologics Cfo Ltd , the special prosecutor said. Park, Choi and Lee have all denied wrongdoing. Park’s lawyer said yesterday that the special prosecutor’s charges against her were “fiction” and that she did not receive illicit favors from Samsung. “Future court proceeding­s will reveal the truth,” Samsung said in a statement, reiteratin­g it did not pay bribes or make improper requests seeking favours.

The investigat­ion looked into an influence-peddling scandal involving Park, who was impeached after accusation­s she had colluded with Choi to pressure big businesses to donate to two foundation­s set up to back the president’s policy initiative­s. The state prosecutor’s office said in a statement that it had re-grouped the team of investigat­ors which indicted Choi in November to take over and “conduct the probe according to law and principle without prejudice”. Lee, a third-generation leader of the Samsung tech giant “chaebol”, and four other executives, were last week charged with bribery and embezzleme­nt over the corruption scandal. Based on the main charges levied against Lee, he could face more than 20 years in prison if convicted. — Reuters

 ??  ?? SEOUL: Anti-government protesters take part in a march in Seoul. Tens of thousands of South Korean protesters held rival mass rallies over the impeachmen­t of President Park Geun-Hye as judges prepare to rule on the scandal that has rocked the country....
SEOUL: Anti-government protesters take part in a march in Seoul. Tens of thousands of South Korean protesters held rival mass rallies over the impeachmen­t of President Park Geun-Hye as judges prepare to rule on the scandal that has rocked the country....

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