Samsung Group to disband
its corporate strategy office after probe ends
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[February 06, 2017]
By Se Young Lee
SEOUL
(Reuters) - Samsung Group said it will disband its corporate strategy
office after a special prosecution probe ends, setting a timeline on a
pledge to wind up a power center that has been criticized for its role
in South Korea's graft scandal.
The strategy office, comprising some 200 elite staff hand-picked from
affiliates of the nation's top conglomerate, is the vehicle through
which the founding Lee family makes key decisions such as restructuring
and investments for new businesses, insiders and analysts say.
It has been under intense scrutiny as the South Korean special
prosecutor's office probed the smartphones-to-biopharmaceuticals
business empire as part of a wider investigation into the scandal that
threatens to permanently unseat President Park Geun-hye.
Special prosecution has classified Jay Y. Lee, third-generation leader
of Samsung Group, and head of the corporate strategy office Choi
Gee-sung as suspects in its bribery investigation on suspicions that
Samsung paid money to organizations linked to Park's confidant, Choi
Soon-sil, to pave the way for a 2015 merger of two affiliates.
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Other executives from the strategy office have also been questioned by
investigators on suspicions the office was involved in the lobbying
process on the merger deal, heaping pressure for its closure.
"Action will be taken following the conclusion of the special
prosecutor's investigation," Samsung said in a brief statement, adding
that preparations are already underway.
Lee, who assumed leadership of Samsung after his father Lee Kun-hee was
incapacitated by a May 2014 heart attack, said in a December parliament
hearing over the graft scandal that he plans to disband the office but
did not give a specific timeline.
The special prosecution's investigation is currently set to conclude by
Feb. 28 but it said separately on Monday it is considering seeking a
30-day extension.
NERVE CENTER
Known informally as the "control tower", Samsung's corporate strategy
office is the nerve center of the $239 billion business empire since the
office was created in December 2010.
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Jay Y. Lee, center, vice chairman of Samsung Electronics, arrives to
be questioned as a suspect in bribery case in the influence-peddling
scandal that led to the president's impeachment at the office of the
independent counsel in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, Jan. 12, 2017.
REUTERS/Ahn Young-joon/Pool
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The
office does not exist as a legal entity and its executives and employees are
technically on the payroll of affiliates such as flagship Samsung Electronics Co
Ltd.
The
corporate strategy office is the latest iteration of a Samsung control tower.
Its predecessor, the strategic planning office, was dismantled in 2008 after
executives at the office were investigated on allegations of helping Samsung
Electronics chairman Lee Kun-hee set up slush funds by using fake accounts.
Samsung on Monday declined to comment on how the conglomerate plans to perform
the functions of the strategy office after it is disbanded.
Park Ju-gun, head of corporate analysis firm CEO Score, said the conglomerate
still needs a way to coordinate group-level affairs and maximize synergies among
Samsung companies.
He said Samsung will likely re-create an office similar to the corporate
strategy office in the future, albeit with reduced responsibilities in terms of
protecting the Lee family's interests.
"The control tower can exist if it can operate in a transparent an open manner,"
he said.
(Reporting by Se Young Lee; Additional reporting by Ju-min Park; Editing by
Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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