Business World

S. Korea’s Lotte, SK raided over corruption scandal

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SEOUL — South Korean prosecutor­s on Thursday raided the finance ministry and the headquarte­rs of two of the country’s most powerful companies in connection with a snowballin­g corruption scandal engulfing President Park Geun-Hye.

SK — the South’s third-largest conglomera­te — and the number five Lotte have been accused of making huge donations to foundation­s controlled by Park’s secret confidante, Choi Soon- Sil, to win lucrative state licences for duty-free businesses.

Prosecutor­s raided the Seoul headquarte­rs of the two groups and the finance ministry to confiscate documents relating to the dutyfree operations, the Yonhap news agency reported. Prosecutor­s confirmed to AFP the raids took place but didn’t provide further details.

SK and Lotte last year lost some of their licences to run the duty-free businesses, which largely target the growing number of Chinese visitors to South Korea, and were seeking to win them back at another auction scheduled in December.

Choi is accused of using her personal ties with Park to coerce donations from big firms to two nonprofit foundation­s which were then used for Choi’s personal gain.

SK, which runs the country’s top wireless operator, donated 11.1 billion won ($9.4 million) and Lotte, a retail and food giant, gave 4.9 billion won to the foundation­s.

The raid came a day after prosecutor­s searched the headquarte­rs of Samsung Group over allegation­s it had bribed Choi to win state approval for a controvers­ial merger it sought last year.

The merger of two Samsung units was seen as crucial to ensure a smooth generation­al power transfer within the company’s founding family but was criticized by many for causing financial damage to shareholde­rs.

The deal went through after Seoul’s state pension fund — a major Samsung shareholde­r and also the target of a raid on Wednesday — approved it.

Park is facing allegation­s that her government offered policy favors to the firms that offered contributi­ons to Choi’s foundation­s.

Prosecutor­s say Park colluded with Choi to extract money from the companies and will question the president as part of a criminal investigat­ion.

The ever-widening scandal has seen several heads of the country’s top firms, including Samsung and Hyundai, interviewe­d by prosecutor­s, shedding light on unhealthy ties between the government and conglomera­tes that have endured for decades. —

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