The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Samsung boss on trial over ‘manipulate­d’ takeover

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SEOUL: The jailed de facto leader of the giant Samsung group went on trial yesterday over a stock manipulati­on case that effectivel­y puts South Korea’s system of conglomera­te control in the dock.

Samsung – whose flagship subsidiary is among the world’s biggest smartphone and computer chip makers – is by far the largest of the familycont­rolled empires known as chaebols that dominate business in South Korea, the world’s 12thlarges­t economy.

Chaebol families often have only a small ownership stake in their empires, but maintain control through complex webs of cross-shareholdi­ngs between units.

Lee Jae-yong, the vicechairm­an of Samsung Electronic­s and the grandson of the group’s founder, is accused of stock manipulati­on, breach of trust and other offences when two other subsidiari­es, Samsung C&T and Cheil Industries, merged in 2015.

Lee – who had emergency surgery for appendicit­is last month, delaying the proceeding­s – looked gaunt in court, reports said, and wore a dark suit with a white shirt.

Lee was the largest shareholde­r in Cheil Industries, and critics say Samsung sought to artificial­ly lower the price of C&T to give him a bigger stake in the merged entity – a key part of the Samsung structure – consolidat­ing his grip on the conglomera­te ahead of his father’s death last year.

His lawyers have previously said that everything he did in connection with the merger was legal.

Lee is already serving a twoand-a-half year prison sentence for bribery, embezzleme­nt and other offences in connection with the corruption scandal that brought down ex-South Korean president Park Geun-hye.

Samsung is crucial to South Korea’s economic health, and is active in sectors ranging from constructi­on to healthcare to insurance.

But Vladimir Tikhonov, professor of Korean Studies at the University of Oslo, told AFP: “The most problemati­c aspect is the attempted continuati­on of the unchalleng­ed dynastic rule over a company which is responsibl­e over 20 per cent of South Korea’s GDP.

“Samsung’s main stakeholde­rs are its shareowner­s, including the minor ones, its workers and South Korean society as a whole,” he said. “It is too big to be a dynastic property.”

Lee’s father, Samsung chairman Lee Kun-hee, died in October, leaving his heirs a vast fortune and an inheritanc­e tax bill of around 13 trillion won (US$11.7 billion), with the first instalment due end of this month.

 ?? Photo — AFP ?? Lee (right), leaving after a retrial at the Seoul High Court in Seoul.
Photo — AFP Lee (right), leaving after a retrial at the Seoul High Court in Seoul.

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