Former South Korea president Moon Jae-in indicted for corruption: Prosecution
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Former South Korean president Moon Jae-in was indicted for bribery.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
SEOUL - South Korea’s prosecutors said on April 24 they have indicted former president Moon Jae-in on corruption charges related to the employment of his son-in-law
The 72-year-old was “indicted for corruption for receiving 217 million won (S$198,000) in connection with facilitating the employment of his son-in-law at an airline”, the Jeonju District Prosecutors’ Office said in a statement.
The case adds to the political drama gripping South Korea, which is facing elections on June 3
Moon, who served as president from 2017 to 2022, was known for pursuing engagement with North Korea, including brokering talks between Pyongyang’s leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump during his first term.
According to prosecutors, Moon’s son-in-law was appointed managing director by low-cost airline Thai Eastar Jet, “despite lacking any relevant experience or qualifications in the airline industry”.
He “frequently left his post for extended periods... and did not perform his duties in a manner befitting the position”, they said.
The airline, which was effectively controlled by a former MP from Moon’s party, had given Moon’s son-in-law the job in a bid to win favours from the then President, prosecutors said.
According to prosecutors, any salary and other financial benefits paid by the airline to the son-in-law between 2018 and 2020 “were confirmed as not legitimate salary payments, but bribes intended for the President”.
The son-in-law later divorced Moon’s daughter.
‘Politically motivated’
Moon’s indictment means that two former presidents of South Korea are now in legal jeopardy.
Disgraced former president Yoon is facing trial on insurrection charges over his Dec 3 martial law decree
If convicted, Yoon could be sentenced to life in prison or even be given the death penalty – although South Korea has had an unofficial moratorium on executions since 1997.
He was the second South Korean president to be removed from office, and the third to be impeached by Parliament.
South Korea’s politics are often marked by score-settling.
The only two other living former presidents – Lee Myung-bak and Park Geun-hye – were convicted of corruption and served prison terms.
Former president Roh Moo-hyun, for whom Moon served as chief of staff, died by suicide in May 2009 by jumping off a cliff amid a corruption investigation involving his family.
Moon’s party condemned the prosecution on April 24, calling the indictment “an abuse of unchecked prosecutorial power”.
The corruption charge was “nothing more than a politically motivated move aimed at humiliating a former president”, Ms Park Kyung-mee, spokeswoman of the Democratic Party, said in a statement.
“So the salary paid to the son-in-law was a bribe to the President? Is this the best logic they could come up with after dragging the case out for four long years?” she added. AFP

