Chen apologizes for hiding funds

TAIPEI, Taiwan -- Former President Chen Shui-bian made a public apology yesterday for keeping huge secret funds in bank accounts abroad, just one day after he dismissed a report alleging that he had remitted NT$300 million out of Taiwan in an act of alleged money laundering.

Chen admitted the existence of the funds overseas after Legislator Hung Hsiu-chu of the ruling Kuomintang (KMT) held a press conference in the morning saying that Chen had stashed as much as NT$700 million in Swiss bank accounts of his daughter-in-law Huang Jui-ching.

Hung said that Swiss prosecutors had already frozen the funds and asked Taiwan authorities to verify the origins of the huge amount of money in the name of Huang.

She said the dubious funds came under Swiss probe mainly because Huang had not been working for many years while, her own father formerly served only as a manager in a small local credit cooperative in central Changhua County.

Henry M.J. Chen, spokesman for The Foreign Ministry, confirmed that the Swiss authorities had requested the government’s assistance and cooperation in an unspecified case.

But he declined to reveal the contents of the request, saying the ministry had already forwarded the Swiss document to the Ministry of Justice.

Meanwhile, local cable news station TVBS also reported that more than US$20 million was deposited in bank accounts in Switzerland in the name of Chen’s daughter-in-law.

Legislator Hung called for a formal investigation to determine if the former national leader had violated the anti-money laundering regulations.

Chen admitted in the afternoon that he had kept money left from the funds raised during four major election campaigns in recent years.

The money came mainly from contributions of supporters and subsidies from the government for candidates. Chen took part in two races for Taipei mayor and two for the presidency, the last one in 2004.

He explained that he learned of the fact only early this year that his wife, Wu Shu-chen, had wired unspecified amount of money abroad.

Chen said he had to apologize to all the voters and people of the nation for breaking the regulations requiring that all senior officials report their assets to the Control Yuan under the law fighting corruption.

The Chinese-language Next weekly magazine first reported early this week that the former president had allegedly engaged in possible money laundering operations because he had remitted more than NT$300 million into bank accounts in Switzerland.

The weekly, an affiliate of the Apple Daily, reported that the Egmont Group, an international anti-money laundering network, had alerted Taiwan authorities that former first lady Wu had made large money transfers to several foreign bank accounts.

Citing anonymous sources, the magazine said that Wu had closed Taiwan bank accounts belonging to her and her husband, as well as several others, in 2006 soon after the exposure of the “state affairs fund” scandal in which they were charged of embezzling public funds with invoices or receipts used by other people.

In that scandal, Chen’s wife and three close aides were charged with misuse of public funds.

Chen himself was immune from charges while a sitting president, but prosecutors launched a probe against him immediately after he stepped down from office on May 20.

Just on Wednesday, Chen instructed his lawyer Lee Sheng-chen to deny all allegations about the existence of the questionable money abroad.

Lee described the contents of the report were “totally unfounded.”

But in a televised news conference yesterday, Chen said he had to apologize for not clearly accounting for his campaign contributions, saying the failure to make such a report was “something that is not permitted by the law.”

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Chen apologizes for hiding funds
Former President Chen Shui-bian made a public apology yesterday for keeping huge secret funds in bank accounts abroad, just one day after he dismissed a report alleging that he had ...

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