New Straits Times

S. Korean president refuses questionin­g by prosecutor­s

-

SEOUL: South Korean President Park Geun-hye will not answer questions from prosecutor­s over a snowballin­g influence-peddling scandal rocking her presidency, her lawyer said yesterday.

Prosecutor­s described Park and her secret confidante, Choi Soon-sil, as co-culprits in the scandal. They are accused of coercing top Seoul firms to donate more than US$60 million (RM267 million) to nonprofit foundation­s, which Choi then used for personal gain.

Choi was charged last week with coercion and abuse of power.

The scandal has sparked nationwide fury, with hundreds of thousands taking to the streets to call for Park’s ousting.

A parliament­ary vote to impeach her could take place as early as this week as a growing number of ruling party politician­s back the opposition-led campaign to oust the president.

Park earlier vowed to cooperate “sincerely” with the legal probe but has rejected a series of requests in recent weeks by prosecutor­s to make herself available for questionin­g.

“We regret that we can’t cooperate with the request from prosecutor­s to hold face-to-face questionin­g on Nov 29,” Yoo Young-ha, Park’s lawyer, said.

Seoul prosecutor­s gave Park an ultimatum last week, saying today was the final deadline for questionin­g before a powerful independen­t team of investigat­ors took over the probe in December.

But Park, the first South Korean president to become a criminal suspect while in office, was too busy handling state affairs and preparing a legal defence against the mounting accusation­s, Yoo said.

It is not clear whether Park will cooperate with the new independen­t investigat­ive team.

As a sitting president, Park cannot be charged with a criminal offence except insurrecti­on or treason, but she can be investigat­ed and potentiall­y charged once her term is over.

The president is also accused of letting Choi, daughter of a shady religious figure who was a long-time mentor to Park, meddle in state affairs, including the nomination of top officials. AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia