Deposed South Korean President Park Geun-hye arrested, jailed after long saga
South Korea’s disgraced former
President Park Geun-hye was arrested and jailed Friday over high-profile
corruption allegations that have already ended her tumultuous four-year rule
and prompted an election to find a successor. A convoy of vehicles, including a
black sedan carrying Park, entered a detention facility near Seoul before dawn
after the Seoul Central District Court granted a prosecutors’ request to arrest
her.
Many Park supporters waved
national flags and shouted “president” as Park’s car entered the facility. An
opponent held up a mock congratulatory ribbon with flowers that read “Park
Geun-hye, congratulations for entering prison. Come out as a human being after
30 years.”
Prosecutors can detain her for up
to 20 days before formally charging her. The Seoul court’s decision is yet
another humiliating fall for Park, South Korea’s first female president who was
elected in 2012 amid overwhelming support from conservatives, who recall her
dictator father as a hero who lifted the country from poverty in the 1960-70s
despite a record of severe human rights abuses.
Prosecutors accuse Park of colluding
with a confidante to extort big businesses, take a bribe from one of the
companies and commit other wrongdoing. The allegations led millions of South
Koreans to protest in the streets every weekend for months before lawmakers
impeached her in December and the Constitutional Court ruled in March to
formally remove her from office.
File Photo: Supporters of South
Korean President Park Geun-hye are blocked by police buses as they march toward
Constitutional Court after a rally opposing her impeachment in Seoul, South
Korea, March 10, 2017. (Source: AP)
It made Park the country’s first
democratically elected leader to be forced from office since democracy came
here in the late 1980s. South Korea will hold an election in May to choose
Park’s successor. Opinion surveys say liberal opposition leader Moon Jae-in,
who lost the 2012 election to Park, is the favorite.
Prosecutors can charge Park
without arresting her. But they said they wanted to arrest her because the
allegations against her are “grave” and because other suspects involved the
scandal, including her confidante Choi Soon-sil and Samsung heir Lee
Jae-yong, have already been arrested. The Seoul court said it decided to
approve Park’s arrest because it believes key allegations against her were
confirmed and there were worries that she may try to destroy evidence.
Park’s conservative party
described her arrest as “pitiful,” while the liberal politician favored in
polls to succeed her said the country took a step toward restoring “justice and
common sense.”
The camp of Moon Jae-in, who lost
the 2012 presidential race to Park, said in a statement that the nation should
now “turn the page on painful history” and focus on creating a fair and clean
country.
A day earlier, Park was
questioned at a court hearing for nearly nine hours. As she left for the
hearing, hundreds of her supporters, many of them elderly citizens, gathered at
her private Seoul home. They wept, chanted slogans and tried to block Park’s
car before being pushed back by police.
In the coming weeks, prosecutors
are expected to formally charge Park with extortion, bribery and abuse of
power. Her bribery conviction alone is punishable by the minimum 10 years in
prison and the maximum life imprisonment in South Korea.
Prosecutors believe Park
conspired with Choi and a top presidential adviser to bully 16 business groups,
including Samsung, to donate 77.4 billion won ($69 million) for the launch of
two nonprofits that Choi controlled. Company executives said they felt forced
to donate in fear of retaliatory measures including state tax investigations.
Park and Choi are accused of
separately receiving a bribe from Samsung and colluding with top officials to
blacklist artists critical of Park’s policies to deny them state financial
assistance programs, according to prosecutors. Park also is alleged to have
passed on state secrets to Choi via a presidential aide.
Park and Choi deny most of the
allegations. Park has said she only let Choi edit some of her presidential
speeches and got her help on “public relations” issues. Choi made similar
statements. The women, both in their 60s, have been friends for 40 years. Park
once described Choi as someone who helped her when she had “difficulties,” an
apparent reference to her parents’ assassinations in the 1970s.
Park’s father, Chung-hee, was
gunned down by his own intelligence chief in 1979, five years after his wife
was killed in an assassination attempt that targeted him. Park Geun-hye served
as first lady after her mother’s death.
After her father’s killing, Park
Geun-hye left the presidential Blue House and secluded herself from the public
eye before she entered politics in the late 1990s — when public nostalgia for
her father emerged after the country’s economy was hit hard by the Asian
financial crisis. She had since become an icon of South Korean conservatives,
earning the nickname “Queen of Elections” for her ability to led her
conservative party to win tight elections.
Park now becomes South Korea’s
third head of state to be jailed after leaving office.
Former presidents Chun Doo-hwan
and Roh Tae-woo, both previously army generals, received a life sentence and a
17-year prison term, respectively, in 1996 on charges including treason and
bribery. They were released in December 1997 on a special presidential amnesty.
Chun and Roh staged a 1979 coup
that put Chun in power more than eight years after Park Chung-hee’s death. Roh
was elected president in 1987 after Chun’s government caved to massive
pro-democracy protests and accepted direct, free elections. In 2009,
prosecutors questioned former liberal President Roh Moo-hyun over corruption
allegations, but they later closed the investigation after Roh leaped to his
death.
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