Terra Founder Do Kwon Asked to Surrender His Passport by South Korean Authorities
South Korea’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has ordered Do Kwon, the controversial founder of the Terra ecosystem that crashed dramatically in May, to return his local passport. The order was issued on Wednesday and requires Kwon to hand over his passport in 14 days. If not surrendered, the passport will be revoked — meaning, if Kwon is in South Korea, he won’t be able to leave the country. Kwon’s application for re-issuance of the passport may be rejected, according to the order, if he were to apply until September 13.
The notice orders Kwon to return his passport to the ministry, a foreign embassy or to public agencies dealing with passports within two weeks from the end of the notice period, which is October 19. If the passport is returned to authorities, Kwon will have his passport issued after September 13, 2023. Kwon’s passport will be canceled if it is not returned within the given period of time.
This follows a request last month by South Korean officials to the Foreign Ministry to void Kwon’s travel documents.
Although Kwon has repeatedly denied that he is on the run, his whereabouts have been unknown since leaving Singapore last month. He is also the subject of a South Korean arrest warrant and a red notice by Interpol.
Separately, the South Korean media reportedly claimed that prosecutors have frozen an additional KRW 56.2 billion (roughly Rs. 330 crore) of crypto assets tied to Kwon, bringing the total sum to about KRW 95 billion (roughly Rs. 555 crore).
But Kwon denies ownership of the assets and usage of the alleged exchanges.
“Once again, I don’t even use Kucoin and OkEx, have no time to trade, no funds have been frozen,” Kwon said in a tweet. “I don’t know whose funds they’ve frozen, but good for them, hope they use it for good.”
For all the latest Technology News Click Here
For the latest news and updates, follow us on Google News.