Tag: Choi Soon-sil

Why Koreans Are So Shocked By the Choi Soon-sil Scandal

Ask A Korean has a great post that really summarizes why Koreans so used to political corruption and scandals are so shocked by the revelations coming out of the Choi Soon-sil mess:

But the English language coverage of this scandal is missing something. The newspapers do have most of the facts, which they recount diligently. But they fail to fully account for the Korean public’s stunned disbelief. Although the scale of the corruption here is significant, Koreans have seen much, much worse. Not long ago, Korean people have seen Chun Doo-hwan, the former president/dictator, made off with nearly $1 billion, and this was back in the mid-1980s when the money was worth more than $4 billion in today’s dollars. Even the democratically elected presidents of Korea–every single one of them–suffered from corruption charges. Lee Myung-bak, the immediate predecessor to Park, saw his older brother (himself a National Assemblyman) go to prison over bribery. Lee’s controversial Four Rivers Project, which cost nearly $20 billion, was widely seen as a massive graft project to push government funding to his cronies who were operating construction companies.
For better or worse (mostly worse,) Korean people have come to expect corruption from their presidents. So why is this one by Park Geun-hye causing such a strong reaction? It is not because Korean people discovered that Park was corrupt; it is because they discovered Park was irrationally corrupt. Koreans are not being dismayed at the scale of the corruption; they are shocked to see what the scale of the corruption signifies.
Park Geun-hye’s corruption scandal revolves around a central question: why would the president risk her administration for Choi Soon-sil? In fact, one of Park’s selling points as the presidential candidate was that she was less likely to be corrupt because she had no family. Her parents–former dictator Park Chung-hee and his wife Yuk Yeong-su–were dead, and she was estranged from her sister and brother. This argument had a modicum of plausibility, since all the previous president’s corruption involved their family in some way. (Kim Young-sam and Kim Dae-jung had issues with their sons; Roh Moo-hyun and Lee Myung-bak, their brothers.)
But the lack of family did not stop Park Geun-hye from being corrupt, because she apparently had to give money to Choi Soon-sil. But why did Park Geun-hye, the president, even bother with Choi Soon-sil, a nobody? To answer this question, we must look back into modern Korean history to trace the relationship between Park and Choi.

[Ask A Korean]

I highly recommend reading the whole thing at the link.

The Huma Abedin of South Korea Shows Up for Questioning By Prosecutors

The more I read about Choi Soon-sil the more I realize she is basically President Park’s Huma Abedin, but she has no official government position.  Fortunately for Huma Abedin if she ever has to show up for questioning by the FBI I doubt they would allow a media circus like this to occur:

Choi Soon-sil, who is suspected of having meddled in state affairs and peddled influence on various state projects by exploiting her decades-long friendship with President Park Geun-hye, passes through a huge group of reporters to enter the Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office in Seoul for questioning on Oct. 31, 2016. (Yonhap)
Choi Soon-sil, who is suspected of having meddled in state affairs and peddled influence on various state projects by exploiting her decades-long friendship with President Park Geun-hye, passes through a huge group of reporters to enter the Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office in Seoul for questioning on Oct. 31, 2016. (Yonhap)

The 60-year-old’s appeared at the Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office a little over a day after she returned from Europe, where she had been residing for nearly two months.

“I am so sorry,” she told reporters before entering the prosecutors’ office. “I have committed a deadly sin. Please forgive me.”

Her lawyer Lee Kyung-jae later said she was trying to express her feelings, adding her statements cannot be deemed as holding any legal meaning.

“She deeply regrets the fact that she caused such a huge confusion,” he told reporters in front of the Seoul High Prosecutors’ Office. “She thinks she should receive due punishment if there was any (violation of law).”

As she got out of a black sedan in black clothes, covering her face with a black hat and a scarf, some hundreds of reporters who had been waiting since early morning surrounded her. It was the first time she appeared in public after the scandal surfaced.

Some citizens engaged in surprise protests as she showed up, chanting and picketing “Down with Park Geun-hye!” and “Arrest Choi Soon-sil!”  [Yonhap]

You can read more at the link.