S. Korea court says Park won’t testify in impeachment trial

December 30, 2016 02:15 pm | Updated 02:18 pm IST - SEOUL:

Korean President Park Geun hye in this file photo.

Korean President Park Geun hye in this file photo.

South Korea’s Constitutional Court on Friday said it cannot require President Park Geun-hye to testify in her impeachment trial that enters the argument phase next week, dismissing demands by lawmakers who voted to remove her over a corruption scandal.

The nine—justice court on Friday confirmed the dates of some of the witness testimonies. It delayed to decide whether to accept a request by Park’s lawyers to receive reports from companies answering whether they were really forced into sponsoring foundations controlled by the president’s jailed friend, Choi Soon-sil.

Lawmakers, who are the prosecutors in an impeachment trial, argued that the request shouldn’t be made because it could pressure companies.

Park’s lawyers said the court needed to independently verify facts because they couldn’t trust investigation results by state prosecutors, who accused Ms. Park of colluding with Ms. Choi to extort money and favors from the country’s largest companies and allow her friend to interfere with government affairs. Some experts see the lawyers’ request as an effort to buy time.

The court said there was no way to force Ms. Park to appear and that the impeachment trial can proceed without her physical presence.

South Korea’s opposition-controlled parliament voted to impeach Ms. Park on December 9 over the corruption scandal, and the court has up to six months to decide whether she should permanently step down or be reinstated.

During the impeachment trial, the court will also review lawmakers’ accusations that Ms. Park was responsible for media restrictions and government inaction during a 2014 ferry sinking that killed more than 300 people, mostly teenagers on a school trip.

State prosecutors have now passed the investigation to a special prosecution team, which on Friday summoned an arrested former presidential aide for the second time this week as they focus on proving bribery suspicions between Ms. Park and the Samsung Group.

Ahn Jong-beom, Ms. Park’s former senior secretary for policy coordination, allegedly directed former Health Minister Moon Hyung-pyo to pressure the National Pension Service to support a merger between two Samsung affiliates last year.

The deal reduced the fund’s stake in one of the companies by an estimated hundreds of millions of dollars in value, but allowed Samsung scion Lee Jae-yong to promote a generational transfer of leadership and increase corporate wealth at the group.

Investigators are trying to confirm that Ms. Park instructed Mr. Ahn to help the merger go through and then had him press Samsung to provide Ms. Choi money and favors.

Samsung is one of the main companies that gave a combined 77.4 billion won ($64 million) to two non-profits Ms. Choi allegedly controlled and abused to expand her personal wealth.

Ms. Choi, Mr. Ahn and Jung Ho—sung, another arrested presidential aide accused of passing on confidential government information to Ms. Choi, will be called to testify January 10.

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