The Citizen (Gauteng)

Probe nothing but ‘revenge’

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– Former South Korean president Lee Myung-Bak yesterday denounced as “political revenge” a corruption probe into allegation­s his office accepted bribes from the country’s spy agency.

The rare statement from conservati­ve Lee, who stepped down in 2013, came after two of his closest aides were arrested and as his impeached ally and successor Park Geun-Hye stands trial for corruption.

Kim Paik-Joon, who was Lee’s senior secretary for administra­tive affairs in Seoul’s Blue House and often dubbed his “butler”, was arrested early yesterday. He is accused of receiving more than 400 million won (R4.6 million) from the National Intelligen­ce Service between 2008 and 2012.

Another former presidenti­al secretary to Lee, Kim Jin-Mo, was arrested on Tuesday on charges of taking about 50 million won from the agency.

“The recent prosecutor­s’ investigat­ion ... is clearly aimed at me,” Lee said in a statement.

“I feel saddened that the country is being shaken to its foundation by recent attempts to roll back history and mount a political revenge.”

South Korea’s current left-leaning President Moon Jae-In has vowed to “fix past wrongs” in the country’s governance, calling them “accumulate­d evils”.

Two other former conservati­ve presidents, Chun Doo-Hwan and Roh Tae-Woo, have previously been jailed for corruption and subversion related to their 1979 military coup and a bloody 1980 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Gwangju.

Former liberal president Roh Moo-Hyun committed suicide in 2009 – during Lee’s term – after being questioned over alleged corruption.

Moon was the chief of Roh’s presidenti­al secretaria­t and Lee said: “Many people believe the prosecutor­s’ investigat­ion is a politicall­y motivated move aimed at destroying conservati­ves and a political revenge for the death of president Roh Moo-Hyun.”

Large constructi­on projects and overseas resources developmen­t contracts made during his term have been repeatedly scrutinise­d but no irregulari­ties found, he added.

Prosecutor­s this month added two new charges – bribery and embezzleme­nt – to Park’s 18-count corruption and abuse of power indictment, accusing her of accepting 3.65 billion won from the spy agency while she was in office. –

Former liberal president Roh Moo-Hyun committed suicide in 2009 – during Lee’s term – after being questioned for alleged corruption.

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