Cape Times

Judge mulls arrest of ousted president

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SEOUL: A South Korean judge was expected to deliberate into the early hours of today on whether to arrest ousted president Park Geun-hye, the country’s first democratic­ally elected leader to be thrown out of office, in a corruption scandal that has dominated politics for months.

Park, who could become South Korea’s third former leader to be jailed, is accused of colluding with a friend, Choi Soon-sil, to pressure big businesses to contribute to now-defunct foundation­s set up to back her policy initiative­s.

She gave about eight hours of testimony at Seoul Central District Court yesterday and was being held at the prosecutor’s office next door while the judge studied evidence and arguments to rule on whether to issue an arrest warrant or not.

The decision was not expected to come until the early hours of today, a court official said.

Park, 65, arrived expression­less at the court to plead her case that she should not be arrested or held while prosecutor­s investigat­e the scandal.

Park argues that she didn’t pose a flight risk and wouldn’t try to tamper with evidence.

She and Choi have both denied any wrongdoing.

If Park is arrested, prosecutor­s will then have up to 20 days to file formal charges and put her on trial.

Park’s ousting capped months of paralysis and turmoil over the corruption scandal that also landed the head of the Samsung conglomera­te in detention and on trial. Her impeachmen­t this month left a political vacuum, with only an interim president, pending a May 9 election, at a time of rising tensions with North Korea over its weapons programme and China, which opposes South Korea’s decision to host a US anti-missile system.

Prosecutor­s said on Monday that Park was accused of soliciting companies for money and infringing upon the freedom of corporate management by using her power as president. Park was questioned for 14 hours by prosecutor­s last week.

She faces possibly more than 10 years in jail if convicted of receiving bribes from bosses of big conglomera­tes, including Samsung Group chief Jay Y Lee, in return for favours.

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