20120623 Angina causes Lee to miss court date
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Angina causes Lee to miss court date

CORRUPTION CASE: The former president suffered chest pains at 5am yesterday and doctors recommended that he call off plans to appear for the morning hearing

By Chris Wang / Staff reporter

Former president Lee Teng-hui (李登輝) missed a court date for a corruption case yesterday due to an angina attack, but he was said to be in stable condition after treatment.

The 89-year-old was to attend preliminary proceedings at 9:30am at Taipei District Court for a case in which he is accused of embezzling US$7.8 million from secret diplomatic funds. However, he suffered chest pains at 5am and canceled his appearance.

Doctors from Taipei Veterans General Hospital went to Lee’s residence to examine him and recommended that he call off plans to go to court, said Wang Yan-chun (王燕軍), director of Lee’s office.

“He was disappointed that he couldn’t make it,” Wang told reporters outside the court, adding that Lee was in stable condition, but that he has had symptoms of myocardial anoxia (a lack of oxygen in the heart muscle) since he underwent cancer surgery in November last year.

Lee’s heart condition could have been brought on by fatigue because he had been studying court documents late into the night on Thursday, Wang said.

Yesterday’s proceedings were the first time Lee would have appeared in court as a defendant after he was indicted for corruption on June 30 last year.

The court said the proceedings would be postponed until Aug. 10, when Lee has promised to appear in court, Wang said.

Lee has previously said he was eager to prove his innocence before the court, but was disappointed that the trial had not begun until almost a year after he was indicted.

A secret donation of US$10.5 million made in May 1994 to maintain friendly relations with the ruling party of a then-diplomatic ally, reportedly South Africa’s African National Congress, is at the heart of the prosecutors’ case.

Prosecutors say the donation was provided from a secret National Security Bureau fund to cover a shortfall in the budget of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Created from leftover national security budgets, the fund could only be used with the explicit approval of the president.

Lee and his aide Liu Tai-ying (劉泰英) are accused of illegally siphoning off US$7.8 million to establish the Taiwan Research Institute when the foreign ministry attempted to return the money between 1998 and 1999.

Due to the confidential information involved in the case, yesterday’s proceedings were closed to the public.

The former president’s lawyer, Wellington Koo (顧立雄), said part of the court materials were confidential and could not be copied by the defendant’s lawyer, which would be a violation of the Classified National Security Information Protection Act (國家機密保護法).

Koo said he argued with the judges and hopes to obtain photocopies of the classified documents, which would be crucial for Lee to provide his testimony to the court.

The debate on whether Lee could obtain photocopies of all or part of the classified documents was why the case has proceeded so slowly, Koo said.

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