The Scotsman

First hearing in trial of South Korea’s impeached president

● Judges call for associate at centre of scandal to appear in court

- By KIM TONG-HYUNG in Seoul

South Korea’s Constituti­onal Court yesterday held its first preparator­y hearing in the trial of impeached president Park Geun-hye, who was removed from power over an explosive corruption scandal that saw millions of people protest in past weeks.

The court confirmed it will hear allegation­s that Park colluded with long-time confidante Choi Soon-sil to extort money and favours from major South Korean companies and allowed Choi to interfere with government affairs from the shadows.

The court also said it would review accusation­s in the impeachmen­t bill that Park was responsibl­e for media restrictio­ns and government inaction during a 2014 ferry sinking that killed more than 300 people, mostly teenagers on a school trip.

After discussion­s with Park’s lawyers and with politician­s, who are the prosecutor­s at her impeachmen­t trial, the court decided to summon as witnesses Choi and two former presidenti­al aides. Both were arrested earlier for allegedly helping Choi extort from companies and passing her confidenti­al government informatio­n.

The court has up to six months to decide whether Park should permanentl­y step down or be reinstated. Her presidenti­al powers are suspended until then, with the prime minister assuming the role of government caretaker. The next preparator­y hearing in Park’s trial is scheduled on 27 December.

Politician­s, who have been grilling key suspects in the scandal in weekly hearings broadcast on live TV, plan to take their hearings on Monday to two detention centres where Choi and the two former presidenti­al aides are being held in a desperate effort to question them. The three suspects have refused to attend the hearings held at the National Assembly, citing health and other reasons.

South Korea’s opposition­controlled parliament voted to impeach the president on 9 December as the scandal grew. The investigat­ion has widened with a special prosecutor since Wednesday conducting raids at the offices of the national pension fund and trying to detain Choi’s daughter, Yoora Chung, who is believed to be in Germany.

Choi is suspected of exploiting her presidenti­al ties to get Chung, an equestrian athlete, into an elite university despite questionab­le qualificat­ions. Lee Jae-yong, the scion of Samsung, South Korea’s largest business group, has apologised over the use of corporate funds to buy a horse for Chung, but denied that Samsung sought favour sfromchoi or Park’s administra­tion.

After a request from the investigat­ors, Seoul’s foreign ministry said it will soon order Choi’s daughter to hand in her passport. It will be invalidate­d if she does not return it, min- istry’s spokesman Cho Junehyuck said.

An official from the investigat­ion team led by special prosecutor Park Young-soo earlier said it had obtained a warrant to detain Chung and had asked for help from German prosecutor­s in finding Chung and obtaining evidence, such as financial transactio­n and phone records. A German prosecutio­n official told South Korean media that Germany will co-operate with South Korean investigat­ors.

Samsung is under suspicion that it sponsored Choi in an effort to win government backing for a controvers­ial merger between two affiliates last year that allowed Lee to further promote a father-toson transfer of leadership and corporate wealth at the group. Lee’s father, Samsung Chairman Lee Kun-hee, has been hospitalis­ed since suffering a heart attack in 2014.

Samsung and other major companies gave a combined 77.4 billion won (£53 million) to two non-profit foundation­s Choi allegedly controlled and abused to expand her personal wealth.

 ??  ?? 0 Judges at the trial of impeached president Park Geun-hye
0 Judges at the trial of impeached president Park Geun-hye

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