The Korea Times

Moon to tighten internal discipline

- By Lee Min-hyung mhlee@koreatimes.co.kr

Cheong Wa Dae plans to tighten its internal discipline, forcing officials to abide by a zero-tolerance policy toward any kinds of corruption by overhaulin­g a special inspection team inside the presidenti­al house, it said, Thursday.

The plan came amid an ongoing allegation that the presidenti­al office has conducted illegal surveillan­ce activities on civilians.

“Even after the controvers­y erupted, Cheong Wa Dae has chosen to deal with the incident according to law and principles despite the political burden, rather than cover up the case,” the civil affairs’ office of the presidenti­al house said in a statement.

On top of that, Cheong Wa Dae has since stood up to strong criticisms from opposition parties and some media outlets by actively getting the facts straight in a fair and transparen­t manner, the statement said.

“We will continue to make sure discipline in public offices is reinforced by clarifying the role of our inspection team,” it said.

The controvers­y reached its peak in December when the main oppo- sition Liberty Korea Party (LKP) unveiled documents written by Kim Tae-woo, a former special investigat­or from Cheong Wa Dae.

The documents included detailed action plans allegedly by Cheong Wa Dae to surveil high-ranking government officials, opinion leaders and top company executives.

Kim insisted he was reassigned from the presidenti­al office after reporting a bribery allegation involving Woo Yoon-keun, the Korean ambassador to Russia. Woo is one of President Moon Jae-in’s close aides.

Cheong Wa Dae flatly denied the argument, saying the documents are far from the truth, adding the truth will be revealed once the ongoing investigat­ion into Kim and the scandal are over.

As of Thursday, the prosecutio­n has carried out four investigat­ions into Kim in order to verify his accusation­s.

With the controvers­y showing little sign of abating, senior presiden- tial secretary for civil affairs Cho Kuk pledged last month to confront the scandal.

From the beginning of the controvers­y, the presidenti­al house has maintained a position that it has never carried out any illegal surveillan­ce on any ranking political figures as well as civilians and questioned the documents’ credibilit­y.

Cho said the special inspection team of the Moon Jae-in administra­tion has never taken any “compulsive measures” in any cases.

Under the revamped drive, the presidenti­al house said it would adjust the main function of its internal inspection team with the focus on preventing a pattern of corruption, such as bribery and the leaking of confidenti­al informatio­n.

In a New Year’s press conference, President Moon Jae-in said the role of Cheong Wa Dae’s special investigat­ion team is to inspect any illegal acts of public officials and their possible abuse of authority.

“It is a social problem over whether Kim’s acts are beyond his authority and position,” Moon told reporters. “This is the subject of the investigat­ion.”

 ?? Yonhap ?? Cho Kuk, senior presidenti­al secretary for civil affairs, answers questions from lawmakers at the National Assembly in Seoul on Dec. 31, regarding a recent scandal surroundin­g an allegation that Cheong Wa Dae engaged in illegal surveillan­ce activity on civilians.
Yonhap Cho Kuk, senior presidenti­al secretary for civil affairs, answers questions from lawmakers at the National Assembly in Seoul on Dec. 31, regarding a recent scandal surroundin­g an allegation that Cheong Wa Dae engaged in illegal surveillan­ce activity on civilians.

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