SOUTH KOREAN EX-PRESIDENT PARK GEUN-HYE SENTENCED TO 24YEARS IN PRISON
Park Geun-hye, a former
President of South Korea, who has been on trial for corruption and abuse of
power has been sentenced to 24 years in prison.
Her sentencing brings a
close to the probe into a scandal that exposed webs of double-dealing between
political leaders and conglomerates in the country.
Park, 66, was not
present for the ruling on Friday having boycotted proceedings since October,
and has one week to appeal the charges against her.
Prosecutors had sought
a 30-year jail sentence and an £80m fine on charges that also included bribery
and coercion.
The court agreed with
prosecutors that Park had colluded with her longtime friend Choi Soon-sil to
solicit bribes to the tune of £25m from South Korean conglomerates including
Samsung and the retail company Lotte in exchange for policy favours.
She was jailed for 20
years in February for using her influence to gain favour and enrich herself,
and the heads of Samsung and Lotte were both given shorter prison sentences.
The scandal exposed
long-held suspicions in South Korea: an entangled web of government and the
chaebol – sprawling business conglomerates that dominate the economy.
Park was South Korea’s
first democratically elected leader to be removed from office outside the
electoral process, her downfall last year coming after weeks of street protests
known as the Candlelight Revolution, a parliamentary impeachment and finally an
order from the country’s constitutional court.
The scandal
notwithstanding, Park still commands a loyal following in South Korea,
especially among elderly people who supported her hawkish line on North Korea
and fondly remember her father, Park Chung-hee, who ruled for 18 years from
1961 and lifted the country out of poverty following the Korean war.
Source: ChannelsnewsAsia.
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