S Korea indicts ex-presidential aide in scandal probe

A corruption scandal that has led to President Park Geun-hye's impeachment in parliament.
A corruption scandal that has led to President Park Geun-hye's impeachment in parliament.
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Reuters, Seoul :
South Korean prosecutors indicted a former senior presidential aide and a former vice culture minister as part of their investigation of a corruption scandal that has led to President Park Geun-hye’s impeachment in parliament, media said on Sunday.
Friday’s overwhelming parliamentary vote to remove Park from office puts her fate in the hands of a nine-judge Constitutional Court, which has 180 days to decide whether to uphold the motion.
Park’s powers have been suspended and assumed by Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn, who has ordered a high state of military alert for any attempt by rival North Korea to take advantage of the political turmoil.
South Korea’s finance minister warned on Sunday that the impeachment could weigh on the economy if sentiment was undermined.
Park, whose father ruled the country for 18 years after seizing power in a military coup, has been accused of colluding with a friend and a former aide, both of whom prosecutors indicted earlier, to pressure big businesses to donate to foundations set up to back her policy initiatives.
Park, who is serving a single five-year term ending in February 2018, has denied wrongdoing but apologised for carelessness in her ties with her friend, Choi Soon-sil.
Prosecutors on Sunday again characterised Park as a co-conspirator, media reported, although she has immunity from prosecution as long as she remains in office.
They made a similar assertion on Nov. 20.
If the Constitutional Court affirms the parliamentary vote, Park would become the first democratically elected leader of Asia’s fourth-biggest economy to be forced from office.
“Amid so much global uncertainty, this political situation is further weighing on the economy and a downturn in sentiment could be another problem,” Finance Minister Yoo Il-ho told a news conference.
The two former officials whose charges were reported by media on Sunday included a former senior economic aide, Cho Won-dong, accused of colluding with the president in trying to pressure a South Korean conglomerate, CJ Group, to dismiss a group vice chairman, the Yonhap News Agency reported.
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