The Borneo Post

South Korean prosecutor­s question three SK Group officials in corruption probe

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SEOUL: Prosecutor­s questioned three officials linked to South Korea’s third-largest conglomera­te, SK Group, yesterday as part of a widening corruption scandal that led to the dismissal of President Park Geun-hye.

The Constituti­onal Court dismissed Park on Friday last week when it upheld a December parliament­ary impeachmen­t vote.

An election for a successor will be held on May 9.

Park, South Korea’s first democratic­ally- elected president to be removed from office, has been accused of colluding with a friend, Choi Soon-sil, to pressure big businesses to contribute to non-profit foundation­s backing the president’s initiative­s. Both denied wrongdoing. The Samsung Group, South Korea’s largest conglomera­te, is already embroiled in the scandal and its head, Jay Y. Lee, is in jail on trial on bribery, embezzleme­nt and other charges.

Lee denies all charges and Samsung denies wrongdoing.

A spokesman for the Lotte Group said on Wednesday it was cooperatin­g with the prosecutor­s’ investigat­ion.

The three officials linked to the SK group include Kim Changgeun, the former chairman of the semiconduc­tor-to-telecom group’s top decision-making committee, an SK Group spokesman confirmed.

“We will actively straighten out suspicions that are different from facts,” the spokesman said.

Park has been summoned for questionin­g next Tuesday.

Kim had a private meeting with Park in July 2015, around the time Park was holding a series of meetings with heads of conglomera­tes, the Yonhap news agency reported.

The SK Group controls companies such as the world’s second- biggest memory- chip maker, SK Hynix Inc, and South Korea’s biggest telecoms company, SK Telecom.

Prosecutor­s have not said how long they think their investigat­ion would last. — Reuters

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