Mother of ‘nut rage’ Korean Air heiress questioned

The Korean Air matriarch Lee Myung-hee faced police questioning over allegations she assaulted employees including household staff and construction workers renovating her home. (Yonhap/AFP)
Updated 28 May 2018
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Mother of ‘nut rage’ Korean Air heiress questioned

SEOUL: The scandal engulfing the Korean Air dynasty widened Monday as 69-year-old matriarch Lee Myung-hee faced police questioning over allegations she assaulted employees including household staff and construction workers renovating her home.
Lee’s two daughters, who held management positions at South Korea’s top carrier, became viral sensations for their own temper tantrums which were dubbed the “nut rage” and “water rage” scandals online.
“I am sorry for causing trouble,” a bespectacled Lee said with her head lowered as she walked past throngs of journalists before entering a Seoul police office.
Lee is accused of assaulting drivers and housekeepers from her personal staff as well as construction workers renovating her home and building a Korean Air-affiliated hotel.
The alleged abuses range from cursing and screaming at employees to kicking, slapping and even throwing a pair of scissors at them.
A video that emerged last month showed a woman, reportedly Lee, shoving a female construction worker and throwing a pile of documents on the ground.
Only last week, Lee’s daughter Cho Hyun-ah was summoned before immigration authorities over allegations she hired 10 Filipino maids to work at her family home on false pretenses, by claiming they were working for Korean Air.
It is illegal in South Korea to hire foreigners as domestic helpers.
Cho Hyun-ah made global headlines in 2014 for kicking a cabin crew chief off a Korean Air plane in a fury over being served macadamia nuts in a bag rather than a bowl. She later served a short prison sentence.
Earlier this year, her younger sister Cho Hyun-min was accused of throwing a drink at an advertising agency manager’s face in a fit of rage during a business meeting.
Authorities have since launched a flurry of official probes into the family’s reported abuse of workers, as well as smuggling and immigration law violations.
Their father, Korean Air chairman Cho Yang-ho, issued a public apology over the “immature” behavior of his offspring and removed his two daughters from their management roles.
But that has done little to placate employees. Hundreds of Korean Air workers have held weekly protests in Seoul demanding the ouster of the Cho clan from the country’s flag carrier — a rare act of defiance in the country that prizes loyalty among workers.
The current chairman’s late father founded the Hanjin Group — the South’s 14th-largest business group that runs logistics, transport and hotels businesses as well as Korean Air.


Japan PM’s big election win could mean more beef with Beijing

Updated 3 sec ago
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Japan PM’s big election win could mean more beef with Beijing

TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s thumping election win has blunted domestic opposition to her hawkish security agenda, encouraging plans to press ahead with a defense expansion that China has condemned as a return ​to militarism. As the scale of her government’s historic victory became clear on Sunday — capturing 352 of the 465 seats in the lower house — Takaichi said she would “work flat out to deliver” an agenda that includes building a military strong enough to deter Chinese threats to its islands, including those close to Taiwan. In November, Takaichi touched off a diplomatic storm with Beijing by suggesting Japan could respond militarily to any Chinese attack on the democratically governed island if it also threatened Japanese territory.

STANDING UP TO CHINA
“I expect to see Japan very forward-leaning on defense policy, such as her statements on a Taiwan contingency,” said Kevin Maher, a former US diplomat now with NMV Consulting in Washington. “One impact could be that President Xi Jinping comes to ‌understand her strong ‌stance,” he added.
China
responded furiously
to Takaichi’s Taiwan comment, promising to “resolutely prevent the resurgence of ‌Japanese ⁠militarism” ​if Tokyo continued ‌on its “wrong path.” Beijing also imposed a series of economic countermeasures including a boycott on travel to Japan and export restrictions on items such as rare earths it says Tokyo could use in military equipment.
Shingo Yamagami, a senior fellow at the Sasakawa Peace Foundation and a former Japanese ambassador to Australia, said the “hidden agenda” of the Sunday election was China.
“In light of belligerent actions and waves of economic coercion, should Japan acquiesce or stand tall?” he wrote on X. “The Japanese people clearly chose the latter.”
Taiwan’s de facto ambassador to Japan, Lee Yi-yang, was among the first foreign dignitaries to congratulate Takaichi, writing on Facebook that her victory showed ⁠Japan was not intimidated by China’s “threats and pressure.”
China’s foreign ministry on Monday again
urged Takaichi
to withdraw her remarks on Taiwan and said its policy toward Japan would not ‌be changed by one election.
“We urge Japan’s ruling authorities to take ‍seriously, rather than ignore, the concerns of the international community, and ‍to pursue the path of peaceful development instead of repeating the mistakes of militarism,” foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said.

SECURITY ‍STRATEGY Takaichi, a fan of Britain’s former leader Margaret Thatcher, is already accelerating defense spending to bring it to a record 2 percent of gross domestic product by the end of March. She has also pledged to ease restrictions on arms exports and allow Japan to pursue joint defense equipment projects with other countries.
Her administration plans to formulate a new national security strategy, likely by year end, that would further accelerate ​military spending.
That could lift defense outlays to around 3 percent of GDP, an LDP lawmaker told Reuters ahead of Sunday’s election, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity surrounding such a move.
The potential ⁠increase would follow pressure from US President Donald Trump on Washington’s allies to raise defense spending.
Drawing lessons from nearly four years of war in Ukraine, Japan wants to build up munitions stockpiles and buy new equipment, including drones, to prepare for any prolonged conflict against a more powerful adversary, analysts say. The scale of Takaichi’s security ambitions could, however, be constrained by tax cuts and economic stimulus measures that would strain public finances, said Jeffrey Hornung, an expert on Japanese security policy at the RAND Corporation.
“Maybe you’ll see an effort to spend more, but because of her plans to spend on consumer measures, they may not choose to push much further,” he said.
The landslide victory could also bring a long-taboo security goal into view, one that would not burden public finances.
With more than a two-thirds majority in the lower house, she could table an amendment to Japan’s pacifist constitution to formally recognize the Self-Defense Forces as a military. Any such change would still require a two-thirds majority in the upper house — which she does ‌not currently control — and approval in a national referendum.
“It’s not a slam dunk,” Hornung said, “but probably the best chance for any prime minister.”