Business World

Park’s presidenti­al aides arrested over scandal

-

SEOUL — South Korean prosecutor­s arrested two former top presidenti­al aides Sunday in a snowballin­g influence-peddling scandal which has seen tens of thousands of people take to the streets to demand President Park Geun-Hye resign.

Ms. Park’s approval ratings have hit a historic low of 5% —a record for a sitting president — over the scandal involving her close personal friend Choi Soon- Sil.

Ms. Choi has been arrested for fraud and also stands accused of meddling in state affairs — including government appointmen­ts and policy decisions — despite holding no official position.

Ahn Jong- beom, a former senior advisor to Ms. Park, was formally arrested early Sunday on charges of abuse of power and attempted coercion, the Yonhap News Agency reported.

He is suspected of helping Ms. Choi collect millions of dollars in donations from conglomera­tes like Samsung to two dubious nonprofit foundation­s which Ms. Choi set up and allegedly used for personal gain.

Mr. Ahn, who has been in custody since Wednesday after stepping down late last month said he would “take responsibi­lity for assisting the president badly,” Yonhap reported.

Prosecutor­s also arrested Jeong Ho- Seong, another former presidenti­al aide, over allegation­s that he leaked classified informatio­n.

The 47-year- old Jeong, who was known as Ms. Park’s right hand man and has assisted her since 1998, is suspected of passing presidenti­al speeches and official documents to Ms. Choi.

Ms. Park has been scrambling to restore trust in her administra­tion amid the deepening crisis, reshufflin­g ministers and senior advisers to bring in figures from outside her ruling conservati­ve Saenuri Party.

In a televised address Friday, Ms. Park agreed to be questioned by prosecutor­s, and sought to portray herself as an over-trusting friend who had let her guard down at a moment of weakness.

Her voice choking with emotion, Ms. Park said she had been living a “lonely life” as president and had turned to Ms. Choi for company and help.

The South Korean media has portrayed Ms. Choi, whose late father was a shadowy religious leader and an important mentor to Ms. Park, as a Rasputin- like figure who wielded an unhealthy influence over the president.

Ms. Choi is the daughter of late religious leader Choi Tae- Min, who was married six times, had multiple pseudonyms and set up his own cult-like group known as the Church of Eternal Life.

Ms. Park has been forced to deny that she fell for a religious cult or allowed shamanist rituals to be performed in the presidenti­al Blue House.

Despite the mass protests, Ms. Park is not expected to resign with just over a year of her single term in office left.

Whatever transpires, the very personal nature of the scandal has severely undermined Ms. Park’s ability to govern, turning her into the lamest of lame-duck leaders at a time of slowing economic growth, rising unemployme­nt and elevated military tensions with North Korea. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines