Kuwait Times

South Korea ex-president Park indicted for bribery

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SEOUL: Ousted South Korean President Park Geun-Hye was yesterday charged with bribery involving millions of dollars over the massive corruption and influence-peddling scandal that brought her down. Park, whose impeachmen­t was confirmed by Seoul’s top court last month, is at the centre of a sprawling graft investigat­ion, which has also implicated top businessme­n and brought millions of people onto the streets.

The former leader, already detained at a centre near Seoul, also faces charges of abusing her powers and leaking state secrets, Seoul prosecutor­s probing the scandal said in a statement. “We have formally charged Park... with multiple offences including abuse of power, coercion, bribery and leaking state secrets,” they said after wrapping up the months-long investigat­ion. Park is accused of colluding with her confidante at the heart of the scandal, Choi Soon-sil, who is already on trial for coercing local conglomera­tes into donating a total of 77.4 billion won ($68 million) to two nonprofit foundation­s.

Choi allegedly used some of the donations for personal gain. Park is also accused of offering policy favours to top businessme­n who enriched Choi, including Samsung heir Lee Jae-Yong who was arrested earlier and is also on trial for bribery. Prosecutor­s yesterday also charged Shin Dong-Bin, the chairman of the retail giant Lotte Group, with bribing Choi and Park. Shin allegedly offered seven billion won ($6.15 million) to a sports foundation linked with Choi in exchange for a policy favor from Park over Lotte’s duty-free business.

Park, 65-year-old daughter of the late former dictator Park Chung-Hee, spent nearly two decades living in Seoul’s sprawling presidenti­al palace, before the allegation­s of corruption engulfed her presidency late last year. The scandal sent her once-bulletproo­f approval ratings to record lows with millions taking to the streets for months calling for her ouster, though she also had a loyal following from groups of mainly older rival protesters. Her father is widely revered by aged, conservati­ve South Koreans who benefited from the rapid economic growth under his iron-fisted rule from 1961 to 1979.

Parliament impeached Park last December and she lost her executive privilege-including protection from criminal indictment-last month when the Constituti­onal Court confirmed her impeachmen­t, sending her into detention. The scandal also shed light on her questionab­le, decades-long ties to Choi and Choi’s father, a shady religious figure who wielded huge influence on Park from the 1970s until his death in 1994.

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