The woman at the center of a corruption scandal gripping South Korea yesterday angrily protested her innocence, shouting that she had been made to confess as she was forcibly summoned for questioning.
Choi Soon-sil, who has been indicted for meddling in state affairs through her friendship with impeached South Korean President Park Geun-hye, made the protest at the special prosecutor’s office, before being pushed into an elevator by correctional officers.
The dramatic scene came as the outgoing chief judge of the Constitutional Court urged the bench to wrap up Park’s impeachment trial by March 13, when the retirement of another judge will reduce the nine-judge court to seven and could raise questions about the verdict.
Photo: AP
His comments were the clearest indication of the timing of a decision on Park, either to remove her from office with an election to be called 60 days later, or for her to be reinstated.
Park was impeached amid the influence-peddling scandal that has engulfed her administration over recent months. If the impeachment is upheld, she will become the first democratically elected leader to be removed from office.
Choi was brought into the special prosecutor’s office on an arrest warrant after refusing to answer several summons.
“I am being forced to confess committing crimes jointly with the president,” she shouted to reporters.
“I don’t deserve to be treated like this — and my baby and my grandson,” she said, as guards pushed her into the elevator.
The special prosecutor’s office dismissed her protests.
“Regardless of such groundless claims of hers, the special prosecutor will thoroughly carry out the investigation by law and principle,” office spokesman Lee Kyu-chul told a regular briefing, adding that Choi was trying to discredit the investigation.
As part of their investigation, prosecutors are looking into Samsung Group’s sponsorship of the equestrian riding career of Choi’s daughter, Chung Yoo-ra, 20, who was arrested in Denmark after being sought by South Korean authorities.
Chung has been accused of criminal interference related to her academic record and other unspecified charges.
Park was impeached by parliament last month after accusations that she colluded with Choi to pressure big businesses, including Samsung, to donate to two foundations set up to back the president’s policy initiatives.
Park, 64, remains in office, but has been stripped of her powers while she awaits her fate.
Park, Choi and Samsung have all denied wrongdoing.
Prosecutors said they had summoned Samsung Group president Kim Jong-joong and Samsung C&T Corp president Kim Shin for questioning as witnesses.
The prosecution has now summoned seven different executives at Samsung Group or an affiliate of the nation’s top conglomerate and have so far identified two of them — leader Lee Jae-yong and Samsung Group vice chairman Choi Gee-sung —as suspects in the widening graft scandal.
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