The Manila Times

SKorea’s Lotte family owners go on trial for graft

- AFP PHOTO AFP

SEOUL: Four members of the family who control South Korea’s troubled retail giant Lotte, including its 93-yearold founder, went on trial Monday for embezzleme­nt, tax evasion and fraud.

The proceeding­s against company chairman Shin Dong-Bin, 61, his brother, sister and father—plus the patriarch’s mistress nearly 40 years his junior— come as the endures a barrage of condemnati­on from China.

The company provided land to Seoul to host a US missile defense system, infuriatin­g Beijing, and nearly 90 percent of its Chinese Lotte Mart stores have since been forced to close by either authoritie­s or angry demonstrat­ions.

The trial is the latest blow to the reputation­s of the family-controlled conglomera­tes, or “chaebols,” that powered South Korea’s economic growth in past decades.

More recently, they have increasing­ly become the focus of public anger over corruption and inequality and corruption, as in the scandal that saw president Park Guen- Hye removed from

Lotte chairman Shin is accused of costing the firm 175 billion won ($155 million) through a scams and irregulari­ties.

He has been also charged with negligence for awarding lucrative deals or paying “wages” worth millions of dollars to relatives who made little contributi­on to management.

“I am sorry for causing concern. I will cooperate with the trial sincerely,” Shin told reporters, bowing - room Monday afternoon.

Similar charges were levelled against his older brother Shin DongJoo, his older sister Shin Young-Ja, as well as their father Shin Kyuk-Ho.

Lotte group chairman Shin Dong-Bin arrives to attend his trial at the Seoul Central District Court. Four members of the family who control South Korea’s troubled retail giant Lotte, including its 93-year- old founder, went on trial on March 20 for embezzleme­nt, tax evasion and fraud.

It was not clear whether the nonagenari­an founder was in court, but he did not pass through the gauntlet of reporters packing the entrance to the court building in Seoul.

His 57-year-old mistress was also charged with embezzleme­nt for pocketing large sums in “wages” although she had little role in management.

prosecutor­s in October.

Their alleged offenses are not directly connected to the scandal that brought down Park.

The Seoul-based group, founded in Tokyo in 1948, has a vast network of businesses in South Korea and Japan with combined assets valued at more than $90 billion.

Public mudslingin­g

The decision by Seoul to deploy the US Terminal High Altitude Defense (THAAD) system to guard against threats from the nucleararm­ed North angered China, which fears it would undermine its own military capabiliti­es.

- tem arrived in the South two weeks ago after Lotte signed a land swap deal to provide a golf course in the southern county of Seongju to host the missile batteries.

down dozens of Lotte retail stores in China, ostensibly over “safety issues” as angry protestors hold demonstrat­ions across China denouncing the group and other South Korean businesses.

Lotte, focused on food, retail and hotel businesses, has invested more than $8 billion in its Chinese operations and has more than 120 outlets in the country, with 26,000 local employees.

The Shin family become targets of state probes after 2015 when - tween the two brothers for control of the group fanned public anger over how the South’s dominant family-run conglomera­tes conduct their business affairs.

The feud saw highly public mudslingin­g between Shin Dong- Bin and Shin Dong- Joo, with accusation­s of mismanage - nipulating their frail, aged father whose mental faculties had been called into question.

The dispute ended after board members sided with Shin Dong-Bin, but Lotte since then has come under tougher regulatory scrutiny, with state probes targeting the Shins.

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