Court upholds Park jail sentence
South Korea鈥檚 top court upheld a 20-year prison sentence for former President Park Geun-hye yesterday, in the final ruling over the corruption scandal that brought her down.
The decision brings to an end an extended legal process that involved multiple trials and appeals, including a previous Supreme Court hearing.
The country鈥檚 first female president was impeached in 2017 after huge street protests against her rule.
She was convicted the following year of bribery and abuse of power and jailed for 30 years. A series of appeals, a retrial and further appeals followed which reduced her sentence to 20 years.
Yesterday, the case went for a second time before the Supreme Court, which said it accepted and confirmed the 20-year sentence.
The court also upheld fines and forfeits totaling 21.5 billion won (US$19.5 million).
Park has been boycotting the proceedings, saying they are biased against her, and was not present in court yesterday.
In addition, she has separately been sentenced to two years in prison 鈥 to run consecutively 鈥 for election law violations.
She now faces a total of 22 years behind bars and would be in her 80s by the time her sentence is up.
The corruption scandal exposed shady links between big businesses and politics in South Korea, with Park and her close friend Choi Soon-sil accused of taking bribes from conglomerates, including Samsung Electronics, in exchange for preferential treatment.
Park鈥檚 left-leaning successor Moon Jae-in was swept to power by the public backlash against her and her conservative party.
South Korean presidents have frequently ended up in prison after their time in power, usually once their political rivals have moved into the presidential Blue House.
All four of South Korea鈥檚 living ex-presidents have been convicted of criminal offences, and former head of state Roh Moo-hyun committed suicide in 2009 after being questioned over graft allegations involving his family.
But Chun Doo-hwan and Roh Tae-woo, former army generals who served jail terms in the 1990s for corruption and treason after leaving office, received presidential pardons after serving about two years.
Yesterday鈥檚 ruling completes the trial process and makes Park legally eligible for a pardon herself.
Lee Nak-yon, leader of President Moon鈥檚 Democratic Party, said this month he 鈥減lans to suggest鈥 pardoning Park and Lee Myung-bak, another former president in jail, but faced an immediate backlash from politicians on both sides.
The presidential Blue House said it was 鈥渘ot appropriate鈥 to discuss pardons immediately after the ruling. It was a 鈥渉istorical lesson鈥 that a former president had committed acts that meant she had to serve a prison sentence. 鈥淭his should never happen again.鈥
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