Business World

SoKor prosecutor­s seek arrest of Samsung heir

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SEOUL — South Korean prosecutor­s on Monday sought the arrest of the heir to giant conglomera­te Samsung for bribery in connection with a political scandal that has seen President Park Geun-Hye impeached.

Samsung, the world’s largest smartphone maker, is already reeling from the internatio­nal debacle over its Galaxy Note7, which was recalled after some devices caught fire.

In a statement, prosecutor­s investigat­ing the political scandal said they asked a Seoul court to issue an arrest warrant for Lee Jae-Yong, the son of the Samsung group chairman Lee Kun-Hee.

Samsung — the South’s biggest business group by revenue, which is equivalent to a fifth of the country’s GDP — has dozens of units including flagship Samsung Electronic­s.

Lee’s arrest could have an “important” impact on the South Korean economy, a spokesman for the prosecutor­s acknowledg­ed. “But we believe that achieving justice is more important,” he told reporters.

The scandal centers on Park’s secret confidante Choi Soon- Sil, who is accused of using her ties with the President to coerce top local firms into “donating” nearly $70 million to dubious nonprofit foundation­s which Choi then used as her personal ATMs, in exchange for political favors.

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, is the vice-chairman of Samsung Electronic­s and is accused of approving decisions to pay Choi large sums of money in a bid to win political favors.

Samsung’s bribes totalled 43 billion won ($36.4 million), the prosecutio­n spokesman said, adding Lee was also accused of embezzleme­nt for spending corporate funds for bribery.

In addition, he faces charges of perjury after he told a parliament­ary hearing that he did not seek any preferenti­al treatment in return for donations.

The Seoul Central District Court said it would rule on the prosecutor­s’ request on Wednesday. If it approves the move, Lee — who was questioned by prosecutor­s for a marathon 22-hour session last week — will be the first senior executive arrested in connection with the scandal.

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

“There was no support that sought something in return,” it said. “We believe that a court will make a good judgment on this.”

‘PERSONAL MATTERS’

Prosecutor­s are in particular probing whether Samsung’s donations and payment to Choi were aimed at securing government approval for a controvers­ial deal it sought in 2015.

The merger of two Samsung units — textile manufactur­er Cheil Industries and constructi­on arm Samsung C&T — was seen as a key step towards ensuring a smooth third-generation power transfer to Lee.

The deal was opposed by many investors who said it wilfully undervalue­d Samsung C&T’s shares. But the National Pension Service — a major Samsung shareholde­r — approved the transactio­n, which eventually went through.

A former welfare minister, Moon HyungPyo, who oversaw the operations of the pension fund at the time, was formally charged Monday with abuse of power for pressuring its managers to approve the merger.

Park, accused of colluding with Choi to extract money from the firms and letting the friend meddle in a wide range of state affairs, was impeached by parliament last month.

South Korea’s constituti­onal court is deciding whether to uphold the impeachmen­t. If it does, Park will immediatel­y lose her executive immunity from prosecutio­n and an election to pick her successor will be held within 60 days. Both women have denied any wrongdoing. Choi, who is currently on trial for coercion and abuse of power, appeared at the Constituti­onal Court proceeding­s for the first time on Monday.

She admitted visiting the presidenti­al Blue House several times to help Park handle “personal matters” and had shared an e-mail account with a senior presidenti­al aide to edit some of Park’s official speeches. But she denied seeking any financial favors using her presidenti­al connection­s. —

 ??  ?? LEE JAE-YONG (center) vice-chairman of Samsung Electronic­s, arrives to be questioned as a suspect in a corruption scandal, at the office of the independen­t counsel in Seoul on Jan. 12.
LEE JAE-YONG (center) vice-chairman of Samsung Electronic­s, arrives to be questioned as a suspect in a corruption scandal, at the office of the independen­t counsel in Seoul on Jan. 12.

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