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Samsung Chairman Lee, meanwhile, dropped a bombshell by saying that the massive conglomerate that Samsung Electronics anchors had discovered internal corruption and called for group-wide measures to prevent a recurrence. The 69-year-old Lee, South Korea's richest person, whose words and actions are closely watched, said that unspecified "irregularities" were found at Samsung Techwin Co., which makes robots and supplies weapons to the South Korean military. Lee's revelation appears to have been generally well received. The liberal Hankyoreh newspaper, long a Samsung critic, praised what it called "swift and stern measures" such as the resignation of Samsung Techwin's CEO and disciplining of officials. President Lee Myung-bak is pushing for the establishment of a "fair society" as a key policy aim and has called for corruption to be punished, though it is unclear how successful he will be. South Korea has cracked down before in the form of high-profile prosecutions, though convictions do not always derail careers. Temporarily disgraced businessmen and officials have ended up back in their previous positions or new ones later on. Few big shots do time in jail, often getting suspended prison sentences
-- adding to perceptions that the rich and powerful can act with virtual impunity. Judges keep a close eye on what effect their decisions might have on the national economy. In 2007, an appellate court suspended a three-year prison sentence given to Hyundai Motor Chairman Chung Mong-koo for embezzlement. The presiding judge said the auto tycoon was too important to go to jail. Samsung's Lee was convicted of tax evasion in 2008, fined and handed a suspended prison sentence. He resigned as chairman after indictment, but returned to the post last year after a nearly two-year absence. Many convicted executives and officials, including Lee and Chung, have received special presidential pardons over the years. The aim is usually to foster reconciliation or pave the way for people with key knowledge, experience and skills to continue to contribute to the country's development. "The overall standard of Korea has definitely improved," President Lee said during a visit to the Financial Supervisory Service to berate officials over the savings bank scandal. "But even though the world looks at us with a greater respect, there are still parts of Korea that seem to reflect an era when Korea was much more backward than it currently is."
[Associated
Press;
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