Times of Oman

Prosecutor seeks Samsung chief arrest for bribery

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SEOUL: South Korea’s special prosecutor on Monday sought a warrant to arrest the head of Samsung Group, the country’s largest conglomera­te, accusing him of paying multi-million dollar bribes to a friend of President Park Geun-hye.

Investigat­ors had grilled Samsung Group chief Jay Y. Lee for 22 straight hours last week as a suspect in a corruption scandal, which last month led to parliament impeaching Park.

The special prosecutor’s office accused Lee of paying bribes totalling 43 billion won ($36.42 million) to organisati­ons linked to Choi Soon-sil, a friend of the president who is at the centre of the scandal, in order to secure the 2015 merger of two affiliates and cement his control of the family business. The 48-year-old Lee, who became the de facto head of the Samsung Group after his father, Lee Kun-hee, was incapacita­ted by a heart attack in 2014, was also accused of embezzleme­nt and perjury, according to the prosecutio­n’s applicatio­n for an arrest warrant.

“The special prosecutor­s’ office, in making this decision to seek an arrest warrant, determined that while the country’s economic conditions are important, upholding justice takes precedence,” special prosecutio­n spokesman Lee Kyu-chul told a media briefing.

Prosecutor­s have evidence showing that Park and Choi shared profits made through bribery payments, he said, without elaboratin­g. Lee is due to appear on Wednesday morning at the Seoul central district court, which will decide whether to grant the arrest warrant.

Samsung, whose companies generate $230 billion in revenue, equivalent to about 17 per cent of South Korea’s economy, rejected the accusation that Lee paid bribes. “It is difficult to understand the special prosecutor­s’ decision,” it said in an emailed statement.

Prosecutor­s have been looking into whether Samsung’s support for foundation­s and a company backed by Choi was linked to the National Pension Service’s 2015 decision to support a controvers­ial $8 billion merger of Samsung C&T Corp and Cheil Industries Inc. Samsung has acknowledg­ed providing funds to the institutio­ns but has repeatedly denied accusation­s of lobbying to push through the merger.

“It is especially hard to accept the special prosecutor’s assertion that there was improper request for a favour related to the merger or succession of control,” it said on Monday. NPS chairman Moon Hyung-pyo was indicted on Monday on charges of abuse of power and giving false testimony. Last month he acknowledg­ed order- ing the world’s third-largest pension fund to support the merger of Samsung C&T Corp and Cheil Industries in 2015 while heading the health ministry, which oversees the NPS.

The special prosecutor’s office said in its indictment of Moon that Park, through her aides, ordered Moon to ensure the merger of the two Samsung companies succeeded. Park, 64, remains in office but has been stripped of her powers while the Constituti­onal Court decides whether to make her the country’s first democratic­ally elected leader to be forced from office.

Park has denied wrongdoing but admitted to carelessne­ss in her relationsh­ip with Choi, a friend for four decades. Choi, in jail as she undergoes criminal trial and also denies wrongdoing.

Prosecutor­s opted not to seek the arrest of three other Samsung executives they had questioned, including Vice Chairman Choi Gee-sung, a group veteran who is seen as Jay Y. Lee’s mentor and a likely caretaker head of the conglomera­te in the event Lee is arrested. Shares in flagship Samsung Electronic­s, the world’s biggest maker of smartphone­s, flatscreen TVs and memory chips, ended 2.14 per cent lower, underperfo­rming the 0.61 per cent drop in the broader market.

Investors say that while key Samsung businesses are run by profession­al CEOs and would not be hurt on an operationa­l basis if Lee is arrested, his absence would slow bigger-picture decisionma­king. The Korea Employers Federation, a business lobby, said arresting Lee would undermine confidence both in Samsung and the country’s economy, Asia’s fourth-largest, and called the special prosecutor’s probe “very regrettabl­e.”

South Korea has seen numerous corporate scandals over the years. Jay Y. Lee’s father Lee Kunhee was himself handed a threeyear suspended jail sentence in 2009 for tax evasion. He was later pardoned. Public opinion has in recent years grown less tolerant of leniency extended to the heads of conglomera­tes, or chaebols, for the sake of the economy.

South Korea has been gripped by political crisis for months, with Park impeached in December.

If the impeachmen­t is upheld by the Constituti­onal Court, an election would be held in two months, with former UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon expected to be a candidate. Choi, in detention and on trial on charges of abuse of power and attempted fraud, again denied wrongdoing on Monday in an appearance at the Constituti­onal Court’s impeachmen­t trial.

She also denied having any prior knowledge of the Samsung Group’s controvers­ial 2015 merger of two affiliates. “Even if I knew, I could not have passed on any informatio­n because I have no knowledge about mergers or hedge funds, anything like that, in the first place,” Choi told the court.

The 48-year-old Jay Y. Lee, who became the de facto head of the Samsung Group after his father, Lee Kun-hee, was incapacita­ted by a heart attack in 2014, was also accused of embezzleme­nt and perjury

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