Kuwait Times

Korea president shuns impeachmen­t hearing

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South Korea’s Constituti­onal Court yesterday held its first full hearing on whether to confirm the impeachmen­t of President Park Geun-Hye but she stayed away from the session. The nine-judge court must decide whether to affirm parliament’s vote on December 9 to impeach Park over a corruption scandal which has brought hundreds of thousands of protesters onto the streets every week.

Yesterday’s hearing, which followed three preparator­y court sessions last month, lasted only nine minutes. The court last week ruled that Park was not required to appear for questionin­g. “We will do our best to conduct a fair and thorough review of the case,” said Judge Park Han-Chul. Regardless of whether Park shows up when the hearing resumes Thursday, the case will go ahead.

Her lawyers said she was unlikely to attend future hearings. Park has been suspended from executive duties and the country is being temporaril­y led by Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-Ahn. The Constituti­onal Court has up to six months to decide whether to confirm Park’s impeachmen­t. If it does, a presidenti­al election must be held within two months.

Park is accused of colluding with close friend Choi Soon-Sil to coerce big companies into handing over nearly $70 million to dubious foundation­s which Choi controlled and allegedly plundered.

Choi-dubbed South Korea’s “Rasputin” due to her influence over the president-is now on trial for coercion and abuse of power and her daughter has been detained in Denmark as the scandal spreads. Park has repeatedly denied the corruption allegation­s in sometimes tearful televised addresses, while apologizin­g for lapses. She allegedly ordered aides to leak state documents to Choi, who has no official title or security clearance, and let her meddle in state affairs including the appointmen­t of top officials.

On Sunday the scandal enmeshed Chung Yoo-Ra, Choi’s 20-year-old daughter, who was arrested in Denmark for overstayin­g her visa. Seoul prosecutor­s said yesterday they would seek Chung’s formal extraditio­n even if she wants to return home voluntaril­y. A court in the northern Danish town of Aalborg ruled Monday that Chung would be detained for four weeks pending a decision on extraditio­n. —AFP

 ??  ?? SEOUL: Nine judges of South Korea’s Constituti­onal Court sit during the first hearing arguments for South Korean President Park Geun-hye’s impeachmen­t trial at the Constituti­onal Court. — AP
SEOUL: Nine judges of South Korea’s Constituti­onal Court sit during the first hearing arguments for South Korean President Park Geun-hye’s impeachmen­t trial at the Constituti­onal Court. — AP

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