S. Korea's ex-president Park to appear in
court to avoid arrest
SEOUL, March 28 (Xinhua) -- Former President
Park Geun-hye of South Korea on Tuesday decided to appear in a Seoul court to
avoid arrest, which is being sought by prosecutors over a corruption scandal
embroiling her.
The special
investigation headquarters of the Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office,
tasked with the probe into the scandal, said Tuesday via text message that
Park's legal team informed the prosecutors of Park's decision to appear in the
Seoul Central District Court on Thursday.
The court would decide
whether to take Park into custody after studying evidence provided by
prosecutors and testimonies offered by Park who was grilled by prosecutors last
week.
Prosecutors sought an
arrest warrant for Park Monday for multiple charges including bribery, abuse of
power and the leakage of state secrets. The court's decision is forecast to be
made late Thursday or early Friday.
If the court decides to
issue the warrant, Park would become the third South Korean former leader to be
detained. Two former military strongmen were arrested in 1995 for charges of
mutiny and corruption.
A total of 13 charges
were levied by both state and special prosecutors against Park. Prosecutors
already branded Park as a criminal accomplice to her longtime confidante Choi
Soon-sil.
Park was charged with
receiving tens of millions of U.S. dollars in bribes from Samsung Electronics
Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong, who is now in custody, in return for offering
assistance in Lee's inheritance of management control of Samsung Group from his
ailing father Chairman Lee Kun-hee.
The younger Lee had
effectively taken the helm of the country's biggest family-controlled conglomerate
after his father was hospitalized for heart attack almost three years ago.
Choi was accused of
extorting tens of millions of dollars from scores of conglomerates to establish
two nonprofit foundations she used for personal gains.
One of Park's former
secretaries, who is detained, is suspected of providing secret government
documents to Choi on a regular basis to enable Choi to meddle in state affairs
behind the scenes.
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