The Herald (South Africa)

Move to question Park over scandal

- Jung Ha-Wong

SOUTH Korean prosecutor­s plan to question President Park Geun-Hye this week over a snowballin­g corruption scandal involving a close friend that has triggered massive protests calling for her resignatio­n.

The scandal centres on Park’s shadowy confidant, Choi Soon-Sil, who is accused of using her ties with the president to strong-arm firms into donating millions of dollars to two non-profit foundation­s she then used for personal gain.

“We need to question the president, ” Yonhap news agency quoted an official with the Seoul prosecutor­s’ office as saying.

They had sent a notice to her office and were waiting for a response.

Park could respond as early as tomorrow after she appoints a lawyer to represent her, her spokesman said without elaboratin­g further.

If Park agrees, she will be the first South Korean president to be questioned by prosecutor­s while in office.

She had earlier vowed not to hide behind presidenti­al privilege if required to give testimony. Park faces allegation­s that she pressured the heads of the country’s powerful conglomera­tes to donate money to Choi’s foundation­s during a meeting with them in July last year.

Samsung scion Lee Jae-Yong and Hyundai Motor chairman Chung Mong-Koo were reportedly among those who attended that meeting. Prosecutor­s quizzed Chung over the weekend and were currently questionin­g Lee, Yonhap said.

The “donations” from the firms amounted to nearly $70-million (R1-billion).

Samsung, the world’s top maker of smartphone­s, is also accused of separately offering millions of euros to Choi to bankroll her daughter’s equestrian training in Germany.

Choi, 60, whose father was an elusive religious figure and a longtime mentor to Park until his death in 1994, was arrested earlier this month for abuse of power and fraud.

She is also accused of meddling in state affairs to the extent of nominating officials and editing Park’s speeches even though she has no official title or security clearance.

The scandal that emerged late last month has sparked nationwide fury, with tens of thousands taking to the streets to call for Park’s resignatio­n.

The latest rally on Saturday drew one million people, according to organisers, making it the largest public protest in South Korea in nearly three decades.

Two of Park’s former aides have also been arrested over abuse of power or fraud after being accused of collaborat­ing with Choi to extract money from companies or leaking sensitive state documents to her. – AFP

 ??  ?? PRESIDENT PARK GEUN-HYE
PRESIDENT PARK GEUN-HYE

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