Key Points

A South Korean special counsel has filed for an arrest warrant against Rep. Kweon Seong-dong of the People Power Party over alleged illegal political funds. The investigation centers on Kweon receiving 100 million won from a Unification Church official in 2022. Kweon has consistently denied all allegations against him. The case highlights ongoing scrutiny of political funding and potential church influence in South Korean politics.

Key Points: Kweon Seong-dong PPP Arrest Warrant Sought in Church Funds Probe

  • Special counsel files arrest warrant for Kweon Seong-dong
  • Allegations involve 100 million won illegal political funds
  • Unification Church connection under intense investigation
  • Lawmaker's parliamentary immunity complicates arrest process
2 min read

South Korea: Special counsel seeks arrest warrant for ex-PPP floor leader in bribery probe

South Korean special counsel seeks arrest of opposition lawmaker Kweon Seong-dong over alleged illegal Unification Church political donations

"I am innocent of all allegations - Kweon Seong-dong, PPP Lawmaker"

Seoul, Aug 28

A South Korean special counsel team on Thursday filed for an arrest warrant for Rep. Kweon Seong-dong of the main opposition People Power Party (PPP) over his alleged violation of the political fund law.

Special counsel Min Joong-ki's team filed the request for Kweon, nearly a day after he was questioned as a suspect on charges of having received 100 million won ($72,000) in illegal political funds from a former official of the Unification Church, surnamed Yun, in 2022.

The special counsel team is also investigating an allegation that Kweon had received a shopping bag containing cash from Unification Church leader Han Hak-ja.

In addition, the team is looking into suspicions that Yun and a shaman close to former First Lady Kim Keon Hee recruited a large number of Unification Church members to support Kweon in the PPP leadership election in March 2023.

Kweon is known to have squarely denied all charges against him.

Upon appearing before the special counsel for questioning on Wednesday, Kweon told reporters he was "innocent" of all allegations raised against him.

By law, sitting lawmakers are immune from arrest while the parliament is in session and can only be put under arrest with consent from the National Assembly.

But the privilege came under criticism that it is abused to protect corrupt politicians.

According to the National Assembly Act, lawmakers are mandated to vote on the lifting of immunity from arrest within 72 hours of the submission to the parliamentary plenary session.

The vote can begin 24 hours after the submission, Yonhap news agency reported.

Kweon is a five-term lawmaker who previously served as the PPP's floor leader until June.

Earlier on August 27, Kweon had appeared at a special counsel's office in Seoul to be questioned as a suspect about his alleged violation of the political fund law.

Kweon had arrived at the office of special counsel Min Joong-ki at 9.47 a.m., saying that he was innocent of the various suspicions raised by the special counsel team.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Religious organizations getting involved in politics is always problematic. We've seen similar issues in India too. Separation of religion and state should be maintained everywhere 🙏
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Aman W
Interesting to see how other democracies handle political corruption. The 72-hour voting requirement on lifting parliamentary immunity seems more efficient than our system. Maybe we can learn something from this process.
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Sarah B
Five-term lawmaker and still involved in such activities. Shows how power corrupts over time. The involvement of a shaman and religious group makes this even more bizarre!
Vikram M
While I support anti-corruption measures, we should also remember that these are allegations at this stage. Due process must be followed. The special counsel system seems robust though - hope they uncover the truth.
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Nikhil C
Shopping bag full of cash? Seriously? 😂 Politicians everywhere use the same old methods. At least South Korea is taking action - we need to be equally vigilant about political funding transparency in India.

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