The Asian Age

Now, Samsung executive V-P gets summons

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Seoul, Jan. 20: South Korea’s special prosecutor’s office said on Friday it summoned a Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd executive for questionin­g as it investigat­es a widening influence-peddling scandal that has embroiled President Park Geun-hye.

The office said it had summoned executive vice-president Hwang Sung-soo for questionin­g on Friday, adding he was classified as a witness. It did not elaborate.

Hwang is the fifth executive of Samsung Group, the country’s top conglomera­te, the prosecutor has summoned. Samsung Electronic­s is the flagship company of Samsung Group and is the world’s top manufactur­er of smartphone­s, memory chips and flatscreen television­s. A Samsung Group spokesman declined to comment.

Samsung Group leader Jay Y. Lee and Vice Chairman Choi Gee-sung have been classified as suspects by the prosecutio­n, which has been investigat­ing whether the conglomera­te paid bribes to Park’s confidant, Choi Soonsil, to win support from the National Pension Service for the 2015 merger of two Samsung Group affiliates.

Park, 64, was impeached last month by Parliament over allegation­s that she allowed her friend, Choi, to exert inappropri­ate influence over state affairs. Choi is accused of pressuring big businesses to contribute to non-profit outfits backing the President’s initiative­s.

Prosecutor­s accused Samsung chief Lee of paying bribes totaling $37 million to organisati­ons linked to Choi to secure the 2015 merger of Samsung C&T Corp and Cheil Industries Inc. Samsung has acknowledg­ed making contributi­ons to entities controlled by Choi but has denied accusation­s of lobbying to push through the merger.

The special prosecutor’s office said on Tuesday it had evidence that Park and Choi shared profits gained through bribery payments, but did not elaborate.

The prosecutio­n suffered a blow on Thursday when a Seoul court denied its request for an arrest warrant against Lee, who has helmed the empire after his father Lee Kun-hee was incapacita­ted by a heart attack.

On Friday, the special prosecutio­n said it was mulling whether to make another arrest warrant request for Lee. While the prosecutio­n has said it would not seek arrest warrants for other Samsung executives, the office’s spokesman said that position could change.

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