The Manila Times

SKorea’s Park defense lawyers quit en masse

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SEOUL: Former South Korean president Park Geun- Hye’s defense lawyers resigned en masse Monday in protest at what they called a biased corruption trial, as the exleader described the proceeding­s as “political revenge.”

Park faces multiple charges including bribery, coercion and abuse of power for offering government­al favors to tycoons, and is being held in custody.

She was impeached by parliament after months of mass protests against her over a sprawling graft scandal, and the constituti­onal court upheld the decision in She went on criminal trial in May.

The warrant for Park’s detention was extended for six months last week, with the court citing the risk that she could destroy evidence if released.

At Monday’s hearing her lawyers submitted their resignatio­ns in protest at alleged bias and said the principle of the presumptio­n of innocence was “collapsing,” the Yonhap news agency reported.

“As we’ve reached a conclusion that any defense argument for the defendant is meaningles­s, all of us decided to resign,” one of them, Yoo Yeong-Ha, told the court.

The court asked them to reconsider since the proceeding­s cannot continue without defense lawyers.

State attorneys will be appointed to defend Park if her own lawyers insist on withdrawin­g, but the replacemen­t will take time as new representa­tives would have to review more than 100,000 pages of evidence.

In her first comments to the court since the proceeding­s began, Park said: “I’ve come to the conclusion that it’s meaningles­s to believe that the court will handle the case only in accordance with the constituti­on and conscience”, in the face of external political winds and public pressure.

The past six months had been a “horrible and miserable time,” during which she had “endured pain in my body and mind.”

Park arrived at the courthouse in handcuffs and looking drawn. But she insisted she was innocent.

“I never accepted or granted she said. “I believe it has been fully revealed during the course of the trial that the correspond­ing suspicions are not true.”

She told the court she hoped she would be the last victim of “political revenge in the name of the rule of law.”

Park, the daughter of late dictator Park Chung-Hee, is the third former South Korean president to be accused of corruption in Asia’s fourth- largest economy, where politics and big business have long been closely tied.

Two former army-backed leaders who ruled in the 1980s and 1990s—Chun Doo-Hwan and Roh Tae-Woo—both served jail terms for charges including bribery after they retired.

Another ex-leader, Roh MooHyun, committed suicide in 2009 by jumping off a cliff after he was questioned over graft allegation­s.

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