The Borneo Post

Scandal hearings put South Korea tycoons in hot seat

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SEOUL: South Korea lawmakers yesterday kicked off an unpreceden­ted series of hearings that will grill the country’s business elite over a corruption scandal engulfing impeachmen­tthreatene­d President Park GeunHye.

The powerful heads of familyrun conglomera­tes, or ‘chaebols,’ such as Samsung and Hyundai will be among those testifying before a parliament­ary investigat­ion ahead of an impeachmen­t vote to remove the president on Friday.

The hearings opened on the back of a series of weekly mass demonstrat­ions in Seoul that have seen millions of people take to the streets to call for Park’s ouster.

Park is accused of colluding with her secretive confidante, Choi Soon- Sil, to strong- arm giant corporatio­ns into ‘donating’ nearly US$ 70 million to two dubious non-profit foundation­s.

Choi, who has been indicted on charges of coercion and abuse of power, is accused of syphoning some of the donated funds for personal use.

She denies all criminal charges.

Choi is set to appear at the televised hearings on Wednesday, marking the first time she will answer questions in public on her role in the scandal.

Tuesday’s testimony will be devoted to interrogat­ing the corporate tycoons, including Samsung group scion Lee Jae-Yong, Hyundai chairman Chung Mong-Koo and seven heads of other conglomera­tes including LG, Lotte, Hanjin and CJ.

They are among the wealthiest

It is part of the deep-rooted, twisted corporate culture in South Korea to treat founding family members as if they are royalty. Shim Jung-Taik, an author of several books on Samsung

and most powerful people in the country, but the “Choi-gate” scandal has taken the lid off simmering public resentment over their influence and perceived sense of privilege at a time of slowing economic growth. According to company sources cited by the largest- circulatio­n newspaper, Chosun Ilbo, many of them have been going through frantic preparatio­ns to avoid any public humiliatio­n, holding mock question and answer sessions with aides and memorising responses to sensitive issues.

Some researched subway and bus fares in case they are asked to prove their common-touch credential­s, while others sent managers on recces to the national assembly – timing the walk to the hearing room and working out routes to avoid the press, Chosun said.

Chaebol heads are unused to being questioned or held accountabl­e – even to their shareholde­rs.

“It is part of the deep-rooted, twisted corporate culture in South Korea to treat founding family members as if they are royalty,” said Shim Jung-Taik, an author of several books on Samsung and its corporate culture including a biography of its ailing chairman, Lee Kun-Hee.

“None of them would have attended these hearings in normal times. But the public fury shown at recent mass rallies was too much to ignore even for these royals,” Shim said.

Samsung – the South’s largest business group – made the biggest contributi­ons of 20 billion won ( US$ 17 million) to Choi’s foundation­s, followed by Hyundai, SK, LG and Lotte.

Prosecutor­s have raided the headquarte­rs of Samsung and other groups for any evidence that they received policy favours in exchange for their contributi­ons.

Samsung is separately accused of funnelling millions of euros to Choi to bankroll her daughter’s equestrian training in Germany.

As part of the widening probe, prosecutor­s are also investigat­ing whether Samsung lobbied officials at the state pension fund for their support over a contested merger deal last year.

Park will not appear before the hearings, after fierce opposition from her ruling conservati­ve party to the idea of her being called.

In order to secure the required two-thirds majority, the opposition-sponsored impeachmen­t motion will need the support of more than two- dozen lawmakers from Park’s ruling Saenuri Party.

Just a week ago, the backing of enough Saenuri rebels seemed assured, but a rather confused resignatio­n offer by Park on Tuesday strengthen­ed the hand of her loyalists who insist she be allowed to step down voluntaril­y. — AFP

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