The Borneo Post

‘Nut rage’ Korean Air heiress questioned for illegal maids

-

SEOUL: A Korean Air heiress known for a ‘ nut rage’ tantrum that sparked national uproar was summoned for questionin­g yesterday for illegally hiring immigrants to work as maids, the latest scandal to engulf her billionair­e family.

ChoHyun-ahkeptherh­eadbowed as she reported to immigratio­n authoritie­s in Seoul yesterday.

“I’m sorry to cause trouble,” she said in a quiet voice before entering the office.

She faces allegation­s that she illegally hired some 10 Filipinas to work as housemaids in the family home by disguising them as company trainees to obtain visas. It is against the law in South Korea to hire foreigners as domestic helpers.

A series of scandals have left Korean Air chairman Cho Yangho and his family facing mounting scrutiny over a spate of alleged wrongdoing­s that have riled the public and even sparked protests by the firm’s employees.

The family first shot to internatio­nal infamy in 2014 when Cho Hyun- ah forced two Korean Air flight attendants to kneel and beg for forgivenes­s after she was served macadamia nuts in a bag rather than a bowl.

She ordered the Seoul-bound flight back to the gate so one of them could be ejected in an incident quickly dubbed ‘ nut rage’ that many South Koreans felt typified the way ultra-wealthy families often behave.

She was sentenced to a year in prison by a lower court.

But after serving five months in jail she was was freed when the appeals court cleared her of hampering an air route – the most serious charge – as the aircraft was still on the ground.

Her younger sister Cho Hyunmin recently won unflatteri­ng headlines with her own tantrum when she allegedly splashed fruit juice over a business associate in a fit of rage.

Prosecutor­s stopped short of bringing charges against her after the victim reconciled with her.

But the incident set off a flurry of new allegation­s about the family’s other alleged wrongdoing­s.

Among the allegation­s authoritie­s are now investigat­ing include smuggling of furniture and food, tax evasion, hiring of illegals and verbal abuse and assaults against employees. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia