South Korean prosecutors carried out
further raids on businesses of the Lotte Group, a sprawling
conglomerate at the centre of a bribery probe.
At least 10 divisions were raided including its chemical and confectionary businesses, a spokesman said.
The raids come after police swooped on the group's headquarters on Friday.
This caused the company to pull out of a stock market share sale worth as much as $4.5bn (£3bn).
The
allegations and police action also led Korea's fifth largest
conglomerate to pull out of bidding for the US chemicals company.
Shares in both the chemical and confectionary group have fallen sharply since Friday's raid.
Bid withdrawn
People
familiar with the matter told Reuters that Friday's raids, which
involved about 200 prosecutors and investigators, were part of an
investigation into a possible slush fund, although the Seoul prosecutors
office could not be reached for comment.
Lotte's offer of shares
to the public, known as an initial public offering, had been intended in
part to simplify the ownership structure and improve corporate
governance at the group.
This followed a bitter feud over succession among the founding Shin family last year drew wide public criticism.
The
group has more than 90 firms in sectors as diverse as beer, hotels and
chemicals, and annual revenues of around $60bn, according to the Korea
Fair Trade Commission.
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