Top prosecutors offer to resign en masse in protest over reform legislation

Prosecutor General Kim Oh-soo / Yonhap
Prosecutor General Kim Oh-soo, his deputy and the chiefs of all six high prosecutors' offices nationwide offered to resign en masse Friday after the ruling and opposition parties agreed on legislation that would reduce and eventually scrap the prosecution's investigative powers.
The unprecedented move came after the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) and the main opposition People Power Party reached an agreement on prosecution reform legislation in a breakthrough compromise that defused tensions over the DPK's push to strip the prosecution of its investigative powers.
Prosecutors, however, strongly protested the agreement. The Supreme Prosecutors Office issued a statement saying it "firmly opposes" the proposal by National Assembly Speaker Park Byeong-seug, arguing that it merely postpones the timing of the DPK's plan and contains "serious procedural problems."
After Prosecutor General Kim offered to resign, Deputy Prosecutor General Park Sung-jin and the heads of all six regional high prosecutors' offices ― in Seoul, Daejeon, Daegu, Busan, Gwangju and Suwon ― also tendered their resignations.
The DPK has pushed for a set of amendments to the Prosecutors' Office Act and the Criminal Procedure Act as part of efforts to reform the prosecution that has been accused of abusing its power for political and other purposes.
The compromise deal, brokered by Park Byeong-seug, calls for separating the prosecution's powers of investigation and indictment, with the agency temporarily keeping its investigative rights, while reducing the number of crime types that the prosecution is allowed to investigate to two ― corruption and economic crimes ― from the current six.
The deal also calls for scrapping the prosecution's investigative powers after the capabilities of other investigative authorities improve, and creating a special judiciary reform committee to discuss the establishment of a major crime investigative unit similar to the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The agreement also drew strong protests from rank-and-file prosecutors.
"The proposal hasn't really changed from the current legislation and just shows its intent aimed at hindering probes into the political circle," one prosecutor based in Seoul said.
Another prosecutor argued the deal was intended to "pursue a step-by-step annihilation of the prosecution" while others questioned whether it was right for only the police to handle major cases, such as industrial hazard accidents, in the future. (Yonhap)