Opposition leader indicted for alleged involvement in NK remittance
Prosecutors on Wednesday indicted opposition leader Lee Jaemyung on charges of being involved in an underwear maker’s unauthorized remittance to North Korea five years ago.
Lee is accused of asking Ssangbangwool Group to illegally transfer $8 million to North Korea between 2019 and 2020, when he was serving as governor of Gyeonggi Province, through then Vice Gov. Lee Hwa-young to facilitate his planned visit to Pyongyang, the Suwon District Prosecutors Office said. In return, Lee allegedly promised the Gyeonggi provincial government’s support and guarantee for Ssangbangwool’s business in North Korea.
The prosecution office charged the leader of the main opposition Democratic Party with third-party bribery and violating the Foreign Exchange Transactions Act and the Inter-Korean Exchange and Cooperation Act in connection with the North Korean remittance case.
With the latest indictment, the DP leader faces his fourth court trial on top of three existing ones under way at the Seoul Central District Court regarding allegations of development project-related bribery, election law violations and perjury.
The indictment comes after a court sentenced Lee Hwa-young last Friday to 9 1/2 years in prison on multiple charges, including collusion in Ssangbangwool’s unauthorized transfer of $8 million to the North. The Suwon District Court handed down the sentence after recognizing $3.94 million of the $8 million as illegal funds smuggled overseas.
Prosecutors claim $5 million of the money was intended to help Gyeonggi’s smart farm support program in North Korea, and the rest was to facilitate Lee Jae-myung’s planned visit to Pyongyang. They also suspect that Lee Hwa-young had frequently reported the remittance process to Lee Jae-myung, as the court acknowledged the credibility of former Ssangbangwool Chairman Kim Seong-tae’s statement that he had directly talked to Lee Jae-myung twice on the remittance using Lee Hwa-young’s mobile phone. (Yonhap)