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S. Korean president says to follow parliamentary decision including shortened presidency

Source: Xinhua 2016-11-29 14:52:11

SOUTH KOREA-SEOUL-PARK GEUN-HYE-SPEECH

Local residents and media reporters watchSouth Korean President Park Geun-hye delivering a speech on TV at a railway station in Seoul, capital of South Korea, Nov. 29, 2016. Park said Tuesday that she will follow parliamentary decision including her shortened presidency. (Xinhua/Yao Qilin)

SEOUL, Nov. 29 (Xinhua) -- South Korean President Park Geun-hye said Tuesday that she will follow any parliamentary decision on her fate, including a shortened presidency.

She made the comments during her third televised address to the nation since a scandal involving herself and her longtime confidante emerged in October.

"If ruling and opposition parties find a way through discussion to minimize confusion and vacuum in state affairs and to stably transfer power, (I) will step down from the presidency in accordance with the schedules and legal proceedings (determined by the parliament)," said Park.

Park didn't mention voluntary resignation, demanded by opposition parties and the general public and even by some members of her ruling Saenuri Party.

The third national address came ahead of the scheduled parliamentary vote on a bill to impeach the embattled president as early as Dec. 2 and no later than Dec. 9.

Park said it was all her "big" fault to mismanage personal relationships around her, stressing she hadn't pursued any personal gains "for a flash" as she believed that things would contribute to public interests.

Prosecutors have said Park conspired with Choi Soon-sil, her decades-long friend who has been indicted on charges including abuse of power and extortion. Park became the first South Korean president to be investigated as a criminal suspect.

Large conglomerates had allegedly been pressured by Choi into donating tens of millions of U.S. dollars to two nonprofit foundations Choi actually controls.

Choi has also been accused of having illegal access to secret presidential documents under the connivance or protection of the first South Korean female leader.

The scandal-plagued president made her renewed apology to the public, saying it shattered her heart to be unable to appease people's anger and big disappointment.

It marks Park's third public apology, following the second on Nov. 4 and the first on Oct. 25.

Park added she will elaborate on what's the truth behind the biggest political scandal she ever faced since her inauguration in February 2013, indicating her news conference on the scandal in the near future.

Related:

S.Korean political heavyweight demands Park distance herself from security affairs

SEOUL, Nov. 26 (Xinhua) -- A South Korean political heavyweight in the opposition bloc on Saturday demanded President Park Geun-hye distance herself from security affairs, referring to decision to deploy the U.S. missile shield in South Korean soil and the signing of a military intelligence pact withJapan.

Moon Jae-in, former chairman of the biggest opposition Minjoo Party, told a meeting with people in Seoul that President Park must divorce herself from issues on the military intelligence accord with Japan, the deployment of Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) and the state-authored history textbook.  Full story

 

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S. Korean president says to follow parliamentary decision including shortened presidency
                 Source: Xinhua | 2016-11-29 14:52:11 | Editor: huaxia

SOUTH KOREA-SEOUL-PARK GEUN-HYE-SPEECH

Local residents and media reporters watchSouth Korean President Park Geun-hye delivering a speech on TV at a railway station in Seoul, capital of South Korea, Nov. 29, 2016. Park said Tuesday that she will follow parliamentary decision including her shortened presidency. (Xinhua/Yao Qilin)

SEOUL, Nov. 29 (Xinhua) -- South Korean President Park Geun-hye said Tuesday that she will follow any parliamentary decision on her fate, including a shortened presidency.

She made the comments during her third televised address to the nation since a scandal involving herself and her longtime confidante emerged in October.

"If ruling and opposition parties find a way through discussion to minimize confusion and vacuum in state affairs and to stably transfer power, (I) will step down from the presidency in accordance with the schedules and legal proceedings (determined by the parliament)," said Park.

Park didn't mention voluntary resignation, demanded by opposition parties and the general public and even by some members of her ruling Saenuri Party.

The third national address came ahead of the scheduled parliamentary vote on a bill to impeach the embattled president as early as Dec. 2 and no later than Dec. 9.

Park said it was all her "big" fault to mismanage personal relationships around her, stressing she hadn't pursued any personal gains "for a flash" as she believed that things would contribute to public interests.

Prosecutors have said Park conspired with Choi Soon-sil, her decades-long friend who has been indicted on charges including abuse of power and extortion. Park became the first South Korean president to be investigated as a criminal suspect.

Large conglomerates had allegedly been pressured by Choi into donating tens of millions of U.S. dollars to two nonprofit foundations Choi actually controls.

Choi has also been accused of having illegal access to secret presidential documents under the connivance or protection of the first South Korean female leader.

The scandal-plagued president made her renewed apology to the public, saying it shattered her heart to be unable to appease people's anger and big disappointment.

It marks Park's third public apology, following the second on Nov. 4 and the first on Oct. 25.

Park added she will elaborate on what's the truth behind the biggest political scandal she ever faced since her inauguration in February 2013, indicating her news conference on the scandal in the near future.

Related:

S.Korean political heavyweight demands Park distance herself from security affairs

SEOUL, Nov. 26 (Xinhua) -- A South Korean political heavyweight in the opposition bloc on Saturday demanded President Park Geun-hye distance herself from security affairs, referring to decision to deploy the U.S. missile shield in South Korean soil and the signing of a military intelligence pact withJapan.

Moon Jae-in, former chairman of the biggest opposition Minjoo Party, told a meeting with people in Seoul that President Park must divorce herself from issues on the military intelligence accord with Japan, the deployment of Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) and the state-authored history textbook.  Full story

 

   1 2 3 4   

Key Words :   Park Geun-hye    
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