The Borneo Post

Top S. Korea prosecutor apologises for abuses of power

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SEOUL: South Korea’s top prosecutor apologised yesterday over human rights abuses under past “authoritar­ian government­s”, including the torture and execution of pro- democracy activists.

The country was a military dictatorsh­ip for much of its existence, only embracing democracy in the 1980s.

The powerful legal service has been criticised for decades for prosecutin­g political dissent or turning a blind eye to state abuses, particular­ly against dissidents and pro- democracy activists during army-backed rule.

“I offer my deepest apology to the people of South Korea,” said Moon Moo-Il, who took office as prosecutor-general last month.

“I regret that the prosecutio­n did not fulfill its duty to adhere to legal procedures and protect human rights in some of the past political cases under authoritar­ian government­s,” he said in the first such apology by a chief prosecutor.

Moon cited prosecutio­ns of democracy activists in the 1960s and 70s for supposedly forming a secret, pro-North Korea group to overthrow the South’s government under then- dictator Park ChungHee.

The case drew widespread criticism over the use of torture and lack of evidence, but eight activists were eventually sentenced to death in 1975 and executed the next day.

All eight – and dozens of others who were given hefty jail terms – were exonerated from 2007 onwards by a Seoul court which found that they had been tortured.

“I plan to convey my message of apology to those who were convicted and their families,” Moon said, adding he would make the legal service “transparen­t” to ensure its “political neutrality”.

Overhaulin­g the prosecutor­s’ office has been a key policy priority for South Korea’s new liberal President Moon Jae-In, who took office in May after the ouster of impeached former leader Park Geun-Hye. — AFP

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