The Korea Times

Professors call on Cho to quit as justice minister

- By Bahk Eun-ji ejb@koreatimes.co.kr

More than 3,000 professors across the country have called on Justice Minister Cho Kuk to step down, saying his appointmen­t amid various corruption allegation­s challenges social justice and ethical morality.

About 80 members of a group of professors “hoping for social justice” held a press conference in front of Cheong Wa Dae, central Seoul, Thursday, and demanded President Moon Jae-in replace Cho with someone who could maintain judicial impartiali­ty and receive public approval.

The group posted a statement denouncing the appointmen­t on its website Sept. 13 and has collected 3,396 signatures from former and incumbent professors, from 290 colleges nationwide so far, it said.

The group outnumbere­d those who called for the impeachmen­t of former President Park Geun-hye at the end of 2016 when she was involved in a massive corruption scandal — at the time 2,234 professors joined the signature collection.

“Cho faces multiple corruption allegation­s including managing a private equity fund by taking advantage of his status, and his wife was indicted for fabricatin­g documents for their daughter’s graduate school admission. But despite these, Moon appointed him as a justice minister who needs to guide the people to abide by the law; thus breaking social justice and ethics,” they said in the statement.

Regarding the listing of Cho’s daughter as the lead author of an academic paper after only two weeks work as an intern, they said this was impossible and only ridicules students in master’s and doctorate courses who put in endless work for years on one paper.

“We recognize the need to reform the prosecutio­n and prevent it from interferin­g with politics. But these tasks can only be carried out when a person who is qualified to do this gets a public consensus,” said professor Choi Won-mog from Ewha Womans University’s law school.

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