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Crime

South Korea indicts ex-justice minister

December 31, 2019

Cho Kuk, a former presidential aide, has been indicted on 12 charges, including bribery. The allegations have weakened attempts at improving transparency since the impeachment of President Park Geun-hye in 2017.

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South Korea's ex- justice mininster Cho Kuk
Image: Imago Images/Kyodo

South Korea's former justice minister Cho Kuk on Tuesday was indicted on a dozen charges linked to family investments and university admissions for his children.

Following a monthslong probe into Cho and his wife, Chung Kyung-shim, the Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office served charges to the pair including bribery, document fraud, manipulation of evidence and public service ethics law violations.

Prosecutors said a 6 million-won ($5,183, €4,623) scholarship that Cho's daughter received from her medical school professor could be seen as a bribe considering Cho was a presidential aide who could influence the professor's appointment as a public hospital chief.

Falsified documents

Investigators said the pair forged internship certificates or asked others to issue such "fake" documents.

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The couple is also alleged to have used false-name accounts for stock investments and deliberately misreported the value of their assets.

They are also accused of attempting to tamper with evidence, such as documents and a computer hard disk, as the probe progressed.

Cho stepped down in October after just one month in office — causing a major embarrassment for Moon as the former legal scholar was one of his closest political allies and considered by some as a potential presidential successor.

Moon promised reforms

Moon came to power in 2017 promising to clean up corruption after weeks of large street protests led to the impeachment of predecessor Park Geun-hye.

Smaller demonstrations have erupted against the president on a scale not seen since the impeachment, hitting Moon's public support ratings.

Moon's office called the investigation result "meager" and said it would deepen people's distrust of the prosecutors.

"The investigation shook the president's authority," said Yoon Do-han, Moon's press secretary. "The result raised questions about the intent of the investigation."

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Cho will remain free as he stands trial. Chung, who is also a university professor, was arrested in October on the same charges.

Charges labeled fiction

South Korea's Yonhap news agency cited Cho's lawyer, Kim Chil-joon, as saying that prosecutors had handed down "a political indictment based on their imagination and fiction."

Last week, a South Korean court rejected demands by prosecutors in a separate case to arrest Cho over fears he may skip the country.

Investigators claimed that Cho, while serving as Moon's senior secretary for civil affairs in 2017, abused his power by blocking a government inspection into corruption allegations surrounding a former Financial Services Commission director-general, another official close to Moon's ruling party.

mm/aw (Reuters)

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