ID :
205220
Mon, 09/05/2011 - 08:33
Auther :

Seoul education chief grilled over suspected bribery of rival candidate


SEOUL, Sept. 5 (Yonhap) -- Kwak No-hyun, the embattled Seoul education chief, appeared before prosecutors on Monday to be questioned over suspicions that he bribed his rival candidate to drop out of last year's election for the post.
Arriving at the Seoul Central Prosecutors' Office in southern Seoul at 11 a.m., Kwak flanked by his lawyer posed for cameras but refused to respond to a flood of questions from reporters.



Kwak, the elected superintendent of the Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education, is suspected of giving 200 million won (US$187,160) early this year to Park Myoung-gee, a college professor and rival candidate from the same liberal bloc during the 2010 election for the education superintendent position. Kwak had allegedly pledged a total of 700 million won in return for Park's withdrawal from the race.
Kwak has already admitted to giving Park the money, but he insisted that it was not given in exchange for any election deal as prosecutors suspect. He said it was only given as a gesture of "good will" for Park who was suffering from heavy debts due to the election campaign.
The prosecutors are expected to question Kwak about whether the 200 million won paid to Park was related to his exit from last year's election and how Kwak raised the money delivered in four installments from February to April. Prosecutors will determine whether to seek an arrest warrant for Kwak after the questioning.
Kwak, if convicted of buying off his rival candidate, a violation of the current election law, and punished with a fine of over 1 million won, will be stripped of his post.



"I will reveal the truth about my goodwill intention, as it was distorted as a crime," Kwak told reporters at his office in central Seoul before heading to the prosecution. "I am sorry for worrying so many people."
A local newspaper reported that Park paid several visits to Kwak last year to press the official to promptly pay the money, a piece of news that is expected to support prosecutors' suspicion that Kwak himself was responsible for the secret deal.
"Kwak got surprised by my remarks and tried to catch me, but I just left his education superintendent office. I cannot forgive him for trying to ignore (his promise of money)," the Chosun Ilbo, one of the leading newspapers, quoted Park as having told a close friend.
"Although I might face a blow (from revealing the deal), I can (socially) bury Kwak," Park was reported as saying.
The widening election scandal came as a setback to the Seoul education chief, who secured a victory against the conservative bloc last month. The conservatives had strongly opposed a free school lunch plan for all students that Kwak supported.
Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon resigned last month after losing in a Seoul referendum on the free school lunch program which he denounced as a populist welfare program.
pbr@yna.co.kr

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