The Borneo Post

Tough anti-corruption law takes effect in South Korea

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SEOUL: A tough new anti- graft law came into force in South Korea yesterday with many hailing it as a milestone to help root out widespread low-level corruption.

Dubbed the Kim Young-Ran law after the former supreme court judge who drafted it, the sweeping legislatio­n covers some four million public servants and employees of education institutio­ns in the country of 50 million.

The law targets teachers bribed by parents to give better grades, journalist­s paid to give favourable publicity and officials bought off by businessme­n to speed up bureaucrat­ic processes.

They are now banned from accepting gifts worth 50,000 won (US$ 45) or more, or meals of 30,000 won or more, with offenders facing hefty fines or even a prison term. The law even prohibits the common practice among doctors and other workers at university hospitals of offering favourable treatment to personal acquaintan­ces, including expedited scheduling of surgery.

Offenders often slipped through loopholes of the existing anticorrup­tion law, as it was hard to prove that money or gifts changed hands in return for a favour instead of as a token of hospitalit­y.

“The new law is quite different from the past one. It covers a much wider range of wrongful activities and contains much more severe punishment against offenders”, National Assembly Speaker Chung Sye-Kyun told journalist­s. — AFP

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