The Borneo Post

Samsung’s history tainted by run-ins with the law

-

SEOUL: Starting off as a humble grocery store 79 years ago, South Korean giant Samsung has a checkered history, with its founder, his son and grandson all having run-ins with the law.

The sprawling conglomera­te now so dominates South Korea that citizens joke they live in the ‘Republic of Samsung’.

But three generation­s of the Lee family have faced charges including tax evasion and bribing government officials.

The heir to the business, Lee Jae-Yong, was arrested Friday as part of a probe into corruption and influence-peddling that caused President Park Geun-Hye to be impeached, in a body blow to the firm’s reputation.

The Samsung Electronic­s vice chairman is accused of paying nearly US$40 million in bribes to Park’s secret confidante to secure policy favours.

Both his father and grandfathe­r were also linked to tax evasion but were never physically detained, creating a widespread perception that the family operates above the rule of law.

Samsung – which means ‘three stars’ in Korean – started out as a grocery store in the southeaste­rn city of Daegu in 1938 when Lee Byung-Chull moved away from his large landowning family in nearby southern Uiryeong county.

It grew fast, expanding to Seoul in 1947, before Byung- Chull branched out into fertiliser, tex- tiles, insurance and electronic­s in the 1960s.

However scandal quickly engulfed Byung-Chull when the company’s fertiliser unit was caught smuggling artificial sweetener amid allegation­s he had planned to share the proceeds with corrupt politician­s.

He avoided imprisonme­nt in return for ‘donating’ the fertiliser unit to the state, but his second-born served six months in prison.

Byung- Chull’s third son Lee Kun-Hee, who inherited the business after his oldest son fell out of favour, was also engulfed in legal turmoil.

Along with many other business tycoons of the era, Kun-Hee was charged with bribing then- President Roh Tae-Woo and given a two-year suspended sentence in 1996.

Almost a decade later in the mid 2000s, Kun-Hee was questioned by prosecutor­s after audio tapes of Samsung executives discussing ways to bribe politician­s and state prosecutor­s were leaked to the press.

Samsung issued a public apology and made a donation of 800 billion won (US$700 million) to charity.

But just two years later Kun-Hee found himself in hot water once again when a former Samsung lawyer claimed he had bribed government officials on Kun-Hee’s orders and his private bank account had been used to hide the company’s billion- dollar slush fund.

A special law was enacted in 2007 to investigat­e Samsung, Kun-Hee and his only son Jae-Yong.

Jae-Yong was questioned over allegation­s that a Samsung subsidiary issued stocks at cut-price rates to help him inherit control of the group but he was not formally charged.

However his father was indicted for tax evasion and other charges. In 2008, Kun-Hee announced his resignatio­n, vowing to reform the group and improve transparen­cy.

Kun-Hee was sentenced to three years in prison, suspended for five years. But a year later, he was pardoned. — AFP

 ??  ?? Choi Gee-sung, chief executive of South Korea’s Samsung Electronic­s, speaks during an annual shareholde­rs’ meeting at the company headquarte­rs in Seoul in this file photo. — Reuters photo
Choi Gee-sung, chief executive of South Korea’s Samsung Electronic­s, speaks during an annual shareholde­rs’ meeting at the company headquarte­rs in Seoul in this file photo. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia