Gestures tell of friendship that toppled S. Korea president
SEOUL, Korea, Republic Of — A steely gaze from one woman. A slight, apologetic bow from another. On the first day of the biggest trial in South Korea in years, two small gestures reflect the state of a friendship that toppled a president.
Former South Korean President Park Geun-hye was a study in determination as she strode into a packed Seoul courtroom Tuesday to begin a trial that could send her to prison for life if convicted on the most serious charges.
She sat down and fixed her hard gaze on a spot in front of her. Park’s face betrayed no hint of whatever emotions roiled within, even as flashes exploded and a horde of cameras zoomed in for extreme close-ups that were piped to millions of curious South Koreans.
Moments later, a confidante linked to Park for four decades — and a woman whom prosecutors say Park colluded with to bribe, extort and leak government secrets — entered the courtroom.


