The Borneo Post

No grounds for impeachmen­t – S. Korean president’s lawyers

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SEOUL: The impeachmen­t of South Korean President Park Geun-Hye has no legal foundation, her lawyers argued yesterday, as they submitted their defence against her ouster to the country’s highest court.

Parliament voted to impeach Park last week over a corruption scandal in which she allegedly colluded with a friend to strongarm donations from large conglomera­tes to two dubious foundation­s.

The case is now being considered by the Constituti­onal Court which has 180 days to rule on the validity of the impeachmen­t that charged Park with multiple criminal and constituti­onal violations – ranging from bribery to abuse of power.

Submitting a 24-page rebuttal to the court, one of Park’s lawyers, Lee Joong- Hwan, said the charges lacked any evidential grounds.

“We can’t accept that there was any violation of the constituti­on by the president...the impeachmen­t motion should be rejected,” Lee told reporters.

Park has formally been identified as a suspect in what is an ongoing criminal investigat­ion – a first for a sitting South Korean president.

She is accused of ordering aides to leak confidenti­al state documents to her friend, Choi Soon-Sil, who has no official title or security clearance, and allowing her to meddle in some state affairs, including the appointmen­t of top officials.

Park faces the looming prospect of having her presidenti­al palace raided by prosecutor­s, despite the objections of her aides.

“We came to believe that it is necessary to raid certain parts of the ( presidenti­al) Blue House,” Lee Kyu-Chul, a spokesman for the team of independen­t prosecutor­s on the case, said yesterday.

The team – appointed by lawmakers – has recently taken over investigat­ions by government prosecutor­s who had sought to raid Park’s office in October but were turned away at the gate.

Park’s office has objected to any raid on the Blue House, citing a criminal code that bans any such action on state facilities deemed to be military important.

Park also faces growing pressure to explain what she was doing on the day of the Sewol ferry disaster that killed 300 people in 2014.

The impeachmen­t motion accused her of failing to protect the lives of South Korean citizens.

Testimony by several ex-presidenti­al aides to a parliament­ary investigat­ive committee suggested Park had stayed in her residence after being informed of the unfolding crisis involving the sinking ferry.

Following media reports that she spent the first critical hours having her hair styled, a group of Seoul lawmakers visited the Blue House yesterday as part of their committee’s probe.

“We will meet with the stylists handling Park’s hair and makeup in the Blue House to investigat­e how much time she spent on hair and makeup on the fateful day,” one lawmaker said before entering the complex. — AFP

 ??  ?? Journalist­s being blocked by security officers while South Korean lawmakers of the parliament­ary investigat­ion team visit the presidenti­al Blue House to investigat­e allegation­s over a corruption scandal of Park Geun-Hye. — AFP photo
Journalist­s being blocked by security officers while South Korean lawmakers of the parliament­ary investigat­ion team visit the presidenti­al Blue House to investigat­e allegation­s over a corruption scandal of Park Geun-Hye. — AFP photo

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