Oman Daily Observer

South Korea prosecutor­s seek arrest of Samsung heir

CORRUPTION SCAM: The Seoul Central District Court said it would rule on the request on Wednesday

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SEOUL: South Korean prosecutor­s on Monday sought the arrest of the heir to the Samsung empire over a scandal that has seen the country’s president impeached, in the latest setback for the giant conglomera­te.

Samsung, the world’s largest smartphone maker, is already reeling from the internatio­nal debacle over its Galaxy Note 7, which was recalled after some devices caught fire.

Prosecutor­s investigat­ing the corruption scandal said they asked a court to issue an arrest warrant for Lee Jae-Yong, the only son of Samsung group chairman Lee Kun-Hee.

The Seoul Central District Court said it would rule on the request on Wednesday.

Samsung’s revenue is equivalent to a fifth of South Korea’s GDP and Lee’s arrest could have an “important” impact on the economy, a spokesman for the prosecutor­s acknowledg­ed. “But we believe that achieving justice is more important,” he said.

The scion is vice chairman of Samsung Electronic­s, the firm’s flagship subsidiary, and the de facto head of the group after his father suffered a heart attack in 2014.

If prosecuted and convicted he could face a maximum five years in prison, but leading South Korean businessme­n have previously been given suspended terms for such offences — including the elder Lee.

The announceme­nt sent the share price of Samsung Electronic­s — South Korea’s largest listed firm by value — falling 2.14 per cent, shaving more than $5 capitalisa­tion.

Samsung is already trying to repair an image tarnished by the Note 7 recall crisis and faces stiff competitio­n from Apple and smaller Chinese rivals.

“This is a big crisis for us,” Yonhap billion off its market news agency quoted an unnamed senior Samsung executive as saying. “We have to make aggressive investment and merger and acquisitio­n decisions to race ahead of competitor­s.

“But we are afraid that the latest developmen­t would cause great delays in our decision-making process.”

But Greg Roh, analyst at Seoulbased HMC Investment & Securities, said the firm had a “very well-organised management system” and was driven by “a certain personalit­y”.

The scandal could even help Samsung in the long term, said Shim Jung-Taik, an author of several books on the firm, if it persuaded the founding Lee clan to improve the group’s opaque governance structure and become more transparen­t.

The political scandal centres on President Park Geun-Hye’s secret confidante Choi Soon-Sil.

Choi is accused of using her ties with the president to coerce top local firms into “donating” nearly $70 million to dubious non-profit foundation­s which Choi then used as her personal ATMs, in exchange for political favours.

Samsung is the single biggest contributo­r to the foundation­s and separately paid Choi millions of euros, allegedly to bankroll her daughter’s equestrian training in Germany.

Lee, 48, who was questioned in a marathon 22-hour session last week, is accused of bribery and embezzleme­nt not for approving decisions to pay Choi 43 billion won ($36.4 million), and of perjury at a parliament­ary hearing, the prosecutio­n spokesman said.

In a statement Samsung said the prosecutor­s’ decision was “hard to understand”.

“There was no support that sought something in return,” it said.

Prosecutor­s are probing whether Samsung’s payments were aimed at securing government approval for a 2015 merger of two of its units.

The merger of Cheil Industries and Samsung C&T was seen as a key step towards ensuring a smooth thirdgener­ation power transfer to Lee.

It was opposed by many investors who said it wilfully undervalue­d Samsung C&T’s shares. But it was backed by the National Pension Service, a major Samsung shareholde­r.

Former welfare minister Moon Hyung-Pyo was formally charged on Monday with abuse of power for allegedly pressuring the fund’s managers to approve the deal.

 ??  ?? Samsung Group’s heir-apparent Lee Jae-Yong
Samsung Group’s heir-apparent Lee Jae-Yong
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