‘Heavy penalty’ on energy envoy in Cameroon diamond mining scandal
ByPublished : Jan. 26, 2012 - 16:44
The state watchdog on Thursday reportedly demanded the Foreign Ministry slap a “heavy penalty” on Kim Eun-seok, the ministry’s ambassador for energy and resources, who is suspected of involvement in pumping up the stock prices of CNK International in 2010.
The Board of Audit and Inspection’s council of commissioners held a meeting earlier in the morning and decided to demand punishments for eight officials including Kim, a local media outlet said, prior to the watchdog’s announcement of investigation results.
“As soon as we receive the investigation results from the BAI, we will take immediate action. There will be no tolerance of corruption and illegality,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Cho Byung-jae said.
“The heavy penalty could include dismissal.”
The BAI has been probing Kim on suspicion that he helped drive up the stock prices of CNK International, a mineral development company which won the diamond mining rights in Cameroon in December 2010.
Kim led the Foreign Ministry to publish a press release on Dec. 17, 2010 in which the size of the diamond reserves in a mine in Yokadouma was exaggerated to 420 million carats, according to the prosecution and the financial authorities.
At the time, the ministry said that the 420 million carats of the diamond reserves, in which CNK’s subsidiary C&K Mining had mining rights, were based on UNDP’s 1995-1997 research and Chungnam National University’s 2007 research.
After the press release, the company’s stock price shot up to 16,100 won ($14.4) per share from about 3,000 won prior to winning the bid within 16 trading days.
The ministry deleted the press release from its website just Thursday, which prompted more suspicions.
“The ministry ‘temporarily’ deleted the press release until the BAI announces the investigation results,” Cho said.
Kim’s younger brother and sister-in-law are also under investigation for allegedly purchasing large amounts of CNK stocks, prior to the announcement of the bid winning.
Earlier in the day, prosecutors raided the head office of CNK International in central Seoul and homes of CNK International head Oh Deok-gyun and Cho Joong-pyo, formerly a vice foreign minister and minister in the Prime Minister’s Office, to investigate their alleged involvement in insider stock trading in connection with the Cameroon diamond mining scandal.
According to the prosecution, Cho provided exaggerated data about the size of the diamond reserves for the Foreign Ministry in July 2010, via Oh.
Oh is suspected of distributing false information on the estimated volume of diamond reserves and raking in 80.3 billion won by driving up the stock price and selling them. Oh later knew that the estimated reserves were only 25 million carats, 6 percent of the initial estimate, in 2009 after a field inspection, but intentionally provided an exaggerated figure to the Foreign Ministry, news reports said.
Park Young-june, a protégé of President Lee Myung-bak who until recently served as vice minister of knowledge economy, is also reportedly involved in the scandal.
News reports said Park visited Cameroon as a vice minister at the Prime Minister’s Office in June 2010 to help CNK win the diamond mining bid.
By Kim Yoon-mi
(yoonmi@heraldcorp.com)
감사원, ‘CNK 주가 조작’ 김은석 해임 요구
감사원은 `씨앤케이(CNK) 주가 조작 의혹'과 관련, 김은석 외교통상부 에너지자원대사에 대해 해임을 포함한 중징계를 요구하고 검 찰에 수사를 요청했다고 26일 밝혔다.
감사원은 또 김 대사와 한국광물자원공사 팀장의 친인척, 전(前) 국무총리실 자원협력과장과 에너지자원대사 비서가 본인 명의로 CNK 주식을 거래한 점을 적발, 이 들에 대한 징계도 요구했다.
감사원은 이날 감사위원회를 열어 이 같은 내용의 감사 결과를 의결했다.
감사원은 김 대사가 다이아몬드 추정 매장량이 근거가 없다는 점을 알면서도 2차례의 보도자료 작성ㆍ배포를 주도했고, 보도자료 배포 전 동생들에게 개발 사업을 얘기해 CNK 회사 주식을 거래하도록 했다고 밝혔다.