Bangkok Post

Airline heiresses resign as smuggle probe widens

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SEOUL: In a statement released by Korean Air Lines yesterday, two daughters of its chairman will resign from their executive positions amid mounting public criticism over the women’s behaviour and allegation­s the family engaged in smuggling.

An official at the Korea Customs Service, meanwhile, confirmed that authoritie­s raided the airline’s headquarte­rs in Seoul seeking evidence of alleged smuggling and tariff evasion.

Chairman Cho Yang-ho announced the resignatio­n of his daughter Hyun-ah, who returned to leadership last month after a four-year hiatus following a “nut rage” scandal, and her younger sister Hyun-min, who is under investigat­ion for allegedly hurling a cup of water at a business meeting.

“We are deeply sorry for upsetting the public and Korean Air employees with my family’s problems,” Mr Cho said in a statement. “Everything is my fault. I apologise to the public”.

Mr Cho said Korean Air will create a new management position to hire a senior manager outside the Cho family and establish a compliance committee. A former constituti­onal court judge will head the committee to beef up internal oversight, the flag carrier said.

Ms Hyun-ah achieved worldwide notoriety after she had an onboard tantrum in 2014 when a first-class flight attendant served her nuts in a bag instead of a dish. Mr Cho was the head of the airline’s cabin service at the time. The plane was forced to return to the gate at New York’s John F Kennedy Airport.

She was released from jail after South Korea’s appeals court suspended her prison term for coercion and obstructio­n of business.

Her sister, who is also known as Emily Cho, oversaw the company’s marketing and commercial­s. She apologised on Facebook for allegedly throwing a cup of water at an ad agency official during a meeting.

South Korean media reports have cited anonymous tips from airline employees that the Cho family smuggled foreign goods into South Korea by disguising them as corporate assets. A Korean Air spokesman said the family is fully cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion.

The Cho family’s troubles angered many South Koreans who resent abuses of power by elite families connected to many of the country’s biggest publicly listed businesses. Such family-run conglomera­tes dominate the South Korean economy.

The families and their companies are facing growing pressure for stricter oversight and more transparen­cy in corporate governance.

 ?? AP ?? Former Korean Air executive Cho Hyun-ah, centre, is surrounded by reporters as she leaves the Seoul High Court in May, 2015.
AP Former Korean Air executive Cho Hyun-ah, centre, is surrounded by reporters as she leaves the Seoul High Court in May, 2015.

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