China Daily (Hong Kong)

Lotte Group No 2 found dead amid probe

- By AGENCIES in Seoul

Lotte Group said on Friday its vice-chairman has been found dead as authoritie­s widen a probe into corruption at South Korea’s fifth-largest business group.

Lee In-won, 69, the company’s highest-ranking executive outside the founding family and the top aide to its chairman, was found dead hours before a scheduled appearance at a prosecutor­s’ office on Friday morning.

“It is difficult to believe,” Lotte Group said in a text message to reporters. Lee had been a Lotte man for more than 40 years since he joined the company’s hotel business in 1973.

The death sends Lotte into a fresh crisis. South Korean prosecutor­s are investigat­ing allegation­s of embezzleme­nt, slush funds and tax evasions at Lotte Group. In June, the investigat­ion forced the group to withdraw its initial public offering plan for Hotel Lotte Co. that was expected to raise as much as $5.1 billion.

Suspected suicide

Local media reported that Lee took his own life. Yonhap quoted a note he left as saying that there was no slush fund, in an apparent response to prosecutor­s’ allegation­s. Its report said a resident found his body lying on a mountain in the east of Seoul on Friday morning.

The ongoing investigat­ion and the death of its longtime executive is the latest challenge for Lotte Group, with two sons of Lotte’s 93-year-old founder, Shin Kyuk-ho, already embroiled in a bitter battle over control of the group.

In a rare public display of a family feud among South Korean business elites, the younger son, Shin Dong-bin, 61, last year demoted his father to honorary chairman from general chairman overseeing Lotte’s businesses in Japan and South Korea. His older brother, Shin Dong-joo, 62, was removed from executive positions at various Lotte companies and then launched several failed attempts to take back the group from his younger brother.

The younger Shin, now chairman at Lotte Group, apologized publicly in June, days after prosecutor­s raided Lotte’s headquarte­rs. The investigat­ion was a setback for Shin Dong-bin who had vowed to make his group and its governance transparen­t as public criticism mounted because of the fight with his brother.

Lee In-won was a top aide to Shin Dong-bin.

Lotte started as a chewing gum company in Japan in 1948. It now operates businesses in chemicals, food, shopping and hotels, including South Korea’s largest discount and department store chains. Its brands are well recognized not only in Japan and South Korea but around Southeast Asia.

 ??  ?? Lee In-won, Lotte Group vice-chairman
Lee In-won, Lotte Group vice-chairman

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