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Asian retail giant Lotte accepts resignatio­n from jailed executive

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SEOUL: Asian retail and chewing gum giant Lotte has accepted the resignatio­n of its co-CEO after he was convicted of bribery and embezzleme­nt in a wide-ranging corruption scandal that brought down South Korea’s president.

The company said Wednesday that Shin Dong-bin has left his CEO post at Lotte Holdings but will remain on its board as vice chairman. Shin, a son of Lotte’s founder, was convicted and imprisoned earlier this month

His Japanese co-CEO, Takayuki Tsukuda, will head the holding company at the heart of Lotte’s complicate­d ownership structure, Lotte Holdings said in an emailed statement.

Japan typically adopts a tough stance toward convicted executives, who are usually sacked from chief executive positions when indicted by authoritie­s.

Lotte Holdings in Japan controls Hotel Lotte, which controls Lotte’s various South Korean businesses. Shin’s resignatio­n will inevitably weaken ties between Lotte’s businesses in South Korea and in Japan, the company said.

Before he was convicted and given a two-and-a-half year jail term earlier this month, Shin had sought to improve transparen­cy and reform South Korea’s fifth-largest conglomera­te. Founded by his father in Japan, Lotte is well-known across Asia with a sprawling business that encompasse­s retailing, confection­ery, chemicals, hotels and entertainm­ent.

Shin’s imprisonme­nt came as a shock to the Korean business community and to Lotte itself. Just a week before a Seoul district court ordered him to be jailed, a Seoul appeals court released another business tycoon involved in the same scandal: Samsung Vice Chair Lee Jae-yong. He had spent nearly a year in prison on bribery and other charges but won a suspended sentence on appeal.

Lee’s release fueled a public outcry and anger toward the perceived soft treatment of business elites by South Korea’s judiciary system. Many in Seoul had expected Shin would also avoid imprisonme­nt because he appeared to be less deeply implicated in the case.

Shin’s imprisonme­nt has left Lotte bereft of leadership at a time when it is facing various challenges. The company was looking to sell its retail businesses in China after a diplomatic tussle between China and South Korea over a US missile defense system that battered Lotte’s businesses there. Shin had been solidifyin­g his control over Lotte after a bruising public feud with his older brother who had also sought to take control.

 ??  ?? Shin Dong-bin, a son of the Lotte founder, leaves the Seoul Central District Court after being convicted of bribery and embezzleme­nt. He later resigned from his post as co-CEO. (AP)
Shin Dong-bin, a son of the Lotte founder, leaves the Seoul Central District Court after being convicted of bribery and embezzleme­nt. He later resigned from his post as co-CEO. (AP)

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