South Korean ex-dictator's family to settle $154m in fines

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Chun Jae-Kook (C), eldest son of former South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan, speaks to the media at the Seoul Central District Prosecutors Office in Seoul on 10 September 2013Image source, AFP
Image caption,

Chun Jae-kook, centre, said the family would pay off his father's fines

The family of a former South Korean president convicted of corruption vows to pay back an estimated $154m (£98m) of corruptly-obtained assets.

Former President Chun Doo-hwan's son said the family would hand over various assets in restitution to the state.

A former military general, Chun was leader from 1979 to 1988 after a coup.

In 1996 he was convicted for treason, corruption and mutiny, but pardoned in 1997 and ordered to pay compensation for the slush fund he had amassed.

Part of the charges against the 82-year-old former leader involved collecting hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes during his term in office.

He was originally ordered to pay 220bn won ($202m, £129m) in restitution to the state. He paid some of the money, but said he did not have enough to settle the rest.

Chun's four children will hand over assets that include expensive art and a house in the capital, Seoul, where Chun and his wife are currently staying, reports say.

His son called a news conference to apologise to the nation following months of renewed efforts by prosecutors to recover the money.

"I bow my head in apology on behalf of the family for having caused concerns regards to the issue of penalty payment," Chun Jae-kook, Chun's eldest son, said in the capital, Seoul, on Tuesday.

"The family will co-operate as much as possible so that the authorities' actions to collect penalty payment can be completed smoothly and we will also respond conscientiously to any investigations."