South Korean president replaces premier, others amid scandal

Park Geun-hye, Choi Soon-sil, South Korea, scandal

South Korean protesters wearing masks of South Korean President Park Geun-hye, right, and Choi Soon-sil, who is at the center of a political scandal, attend a rally calling for Park to step down in downtown Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2016. South Korea’s embattled president has replaced her prime minister and two other top officials in a bid to restore public confidence amid a political scandal involving her longtime friend. AP

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea’s embattled president replaced her prime minister and two other top officials on Wednesday in a bid to restore public confidence amid a political scandal involving her longtime friend.

The reshuffles came as prosecutors are investigating whether a personal friend of Park Geun-Hye’s with no government job used her ties with the president to pull government strings from the shadows and pushed businesses to donate money to foundations she controlled. Prosecutors are expected to seek an arrest warrant for the friend, Choi Soon-sil, later Wednesday.

Park acknowledged last week Choi had edited some of her speeches and provided public relations help. South Korean media speculate Choi likely played a much larger role in government affairs.

Park’s office said Wednesday she nominated Kim Byong-joon, a former top policy adviser for late liberal President Roh Moo-hyun, as her new prime minister.

The nomination, which requires parliamentary approval, is seen as an effort by the conservative Park to reach out to liberals for bipartisan support amid the scandal that has already forced her to fire eight presidential aides. The two other Cabinet jobs that Park reshuffled Wednesday were the finance minister and safety minister.

Latest public surveys put Park’s approval rating at about 10 percent, the lowest since her inauguration in February 2013. The surveys showed about half of respondents think Park should resign or be impeached by lawmakers.

READ: South Korean president struggles to contain scandal

Thousands of people rallied in Seoul over the weekend, demanding Park’s resignation. On Tuesday, police detained a man who rammed a large excavator into a gate near the office where prosecutors questioned Choi. He said he tried to meet Choi and help her die because she told reporters she “committed a sin that deserves death” before prosecutors began questioning her on Monday.

Choi has been close to Park since Choi’s father, the leader of a religious cult, gained Park’s trust by reportedly convincing her that he could communicate with her assassinated mother. Choi’s father denied that in a 1990 media interview.

Park has already long been criticized for an aloof manner and for relying on only a few longtime confidantes. That she may have been outsourcing sensitive decisions to someone outside of government, and someone connected with a murky, lurid backstory, has incensed many.

READ: South Korea’s ‘female Rasputin’ returns to face scandal

Read more...