The Korea Times

Minister says ‘conveyed’ request to pardon Lee Jae-yong

- By Kim Yoo-chul yckim@koreatimes.co.kr

Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki said Tuesday that he conveyed to “parties in charge” requests from the country’s business sector for a presidenti­al pardon for Samsung Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong.

“Only the President can grant a pardon. Regarding the possibilit­y of a pardon for Samsung Vice Chairman Lee, I’ve met with the heads of economic lobby groups for discussion­s on how to explore ways to achieve an economic recovery, and one of the attendees suggested the idea of pardoning Lee. That message has been forwarded to institutio­ns in charge quite adequately,” Minister Hong told lawmakers at the National Assembly.

After candidates of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) failed to win mayoral by-elections in the country’s two largest cities, the ruling party and Cheong Wa Dae have been struggling to find new options to prevent Moon’s approval rating from falling further.

Moon is set to hold his first faceto-face meeting with U.S. President Joe Biden at the White House late next month. Because the ongoing global shortage of semiconduc­tors is causing huge supply problems across a wide variety of industries in the United States, Biden recently met the chiefs of major semiconduc­tor companies online and asked them to invest more in chip plants in America. Samsung said it is looking at the “right timing” for a massive investment in the United States.

Biden wants to maintain Washington’s lead over Beijing in the developmen­t of memory chips and Samsung’s huge investment plans could be facilitate­d with its imprisoned vice chairman back at the helm given Samsung’s hierarchic­al decision-making system. As a result, Korean business leaders are hoping President Moon will pardon Lee and allow him to speed up the investment.

Lee was sentenced to two and a half years in prison over bribing impeached President Park Geunhye. The Samsung chief has been barred from working at Samsung for five years once he’s released from jail, though this ban remains debatable.

Amid a flurry of massive investment plans by rivals Intel and Taiwan’s TSMC, Samsung is facing pressure to respond to Biden and President Moon’s calls, and both of them are voicing the importance of semiconduc­tors for national security.

“The possibilit­y of Lee’s pardon has been passed to the person in charge,” the finance minister said in response to a question from a lawmaker. Samsung is close to announcing a massive 70 trillion won investment plan both in the United States and Korea.

 ?? Yonhap ?? Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki answers a lawmaker’s question at the National Assembly, Tuesday.
Yonhap Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki answers a lawmaker’s question at the National Assembly, Tuesday.

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