Bangkok Post

Officials mull raid on Park

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SEOUL: South Korea’s special prosecutor service investigat­ing a corruption scandal involving President Park Geun-hye said it was considerin­g whether to raid the presidenti­al offices and, if it did so, it had no choice but to do so publicly.

Special prosecutor­s are investigat­ing allegation­s that Ms Park colluded with a friend, Choi Soon-sil, and aides to pressure big companies to contribute to foundation­s set up to back her policy initiative­s.

“In case of raiding the Blue House ... to carry out that, there is no choice but to be make it public,” Lee Kyu-chul, a spokesman for the special prosecutor’s team told reporters in a briefing, referring to the presidenti­al offices.

“We are still considerin­g whether the raid is needed and if needed what the raid should be aimed at.”

Ms Park, whose father ruled the country for 18 years after seizing power in a 1961 coup, was indicted in a Dec 9 parliament­ary vote.

She has denied wrongdoing but apologised for carelessne­ss in her ties with Ms Choi.

Ms Choi is facing her own trial. Prosecutor­s have said previously they needed access to the presidenti­al offices as part of their investigat­ion.

The office has denied access.

Ms Park has immunity from prosecutio­n as long as she is in office even though her powers have been suspended since parliament voted to impeach her.

A large crowd of protesters, including about 200 young people dressed as Santa Claus, took to the streets of central Seoul on Saturday for the ninth weekend in a row to demand the immediate resignatio­n of the president.

 ?? REUTERS ?? People dressed in Santa costumes attend a protest in Seoul on Friday demanding South Korean President Park Geun-hye’s resignatio­n.
REUTERS People dressed in Santa costumes attend a protest in Seoul on Friday demanding South Korean President Park Geun-hye’s resignatio­n.

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