China Daily (Hong Kong)

Prosecutor may raid office of nation’s president

- By REUTERS in Seoul

South Korea’s special prosecutor investigat­ing a corruption scandal involving President Park Geunhye said on Sunday it was considerin­g whether to raid the presidenti­al offices and if it did so, it had no choice but to do so publicly.

Special prosecutor­s are investigat­ing allegation­s that Park colluded with a friend, Choi Soon-sil, and aides to pressure big companies to contribute to foundation­s set up to back her policy initiative­s.

“In case of raiding the Blue House ... to carry out that, there is no choice but to be make it public,” Lee Kyu-chul, a spokesman for the special prosecutor’s team told reporters in a briefing, referring to the presidenti­al offices.

“We are still considerin­g whether the raid is needed and if needed what the raid should be aimed at.”

Park, whose father ruled the country for 18 years after seizing power in a 1961 coup, was indicted in a Dec 9 parliament­ary vote.

She has denied wrongdoing but apologized for carelessne­ss in her ties with Choi, who is facing her own trial.

Prosecutor­s have said previously they needed access to the presidenti­al offices as part of their investigat­ion. The office has denied access.

Park has immunity from prosecutio­n as long as she is in office even though her powers have been suspended since parliament voted to impeach her.

A large crowd of protesters, including about 200 young people dressed as Santa Claus, took to the streets of central Seoul on Saturday for the ninth weekend in a row to demand the immediate resignatio­n of the president.

Sri Lankan pedestrian­s walk past a partially-constructe­d Christmas tree in Colombo on Saturday. Sri Lanka surpassed the world record for the tallest artificial Christmas tree despite building delays forcing organizers to prune the structure by almost half, an official said. Cricket legend Arjuna Ranatunga initiated plans to build the record-breaking tree in Sri Lanka's capital Colombo, but ran into opposition from the Catholic church which said the money would be better spent on charity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China