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The
Financial Services Commission on
Sunday suspended Solomon, Mirae,
Hanju and
Korea Savings Bank (AFP/File,
Park Ji-Hwan)
|
The four
are Solomon, Mirae, Hanju and Korea Savings Bank, the Financial Services
Commission said, amid moves to tighten the banking industry in South Korea.
“All
operations of the savings banks including Internet banking were suspended from
6:00 am today,” the commission said in a statement.
The banks
were ordered to appoint new managers and improve their finances within 45 days.
They will be put on sale if they fail to do so.
The
commission said depositors would be allowed to get back up to 50 million won
($44,000) to avoid a run.
It promised
to investigate any irregularities by major shareholders and executives of the
banks. They were ordered to stay in South Korea for questioning.
Prosecutors
said Mirae chairman Kim Chan-Kyong was arrested late Thursday while trying to
flee to China at a port in the southwestern city of Hwaseong.
Last year
the watchdog suspended 16 savings banks found to be in difficulty, mainly due
to reckless investments in risky property projects.
Financial
regulators have launched an extensive probe into irregularities by savings
banks since Busan, the country’s largest savings bank, was suspended in early
2011.
In
February, Busan’s eight executives received jail terms of up to 14 years for
offenses including a lobbying operation aimed at keeping the bank open and $5.3
billion of illegal lending.
Busan was
found to have lobbied politicians and government officials to avoid having its
operations suspended.
Prosecutors
have questioned thousands of people and dozens of government officials, bank
executives and others have been charged with corruption. Three bankers
have committed suicide.
Agence France-Presse
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