South Korea: President Park embroiled in leaked documents scandal.
Follow @Mazana17People walk past a television screen showing South Korean President Park Geun-Hye making a public apology
on October 25.
Political turmoil is gripping South Korea as a scandal engulfs President Park Geun-hye, who stands accused of leaking official state documents to a friend.
The outcry over the
allegations that she shared information with a confidante, who does not
hold any
public office, led to a rare event in South Korean politics on
Tuesday -- a televised presidential apology.
In
it, Park admitted to sharing state documents with Choi Soon-sil, who
gave "her personal opinion" on Park's speeches before the presidential
election in 2012.
Park also said
Choi looked at "some documents" for a certain period of time after Park
took office, but didn't specify what they were.
"I
am shocked and my heart is breaking for causing public concern," Park
said in the live telecast. "I've
done so (shared the documents) out of
pure heart so that I could carefully review (the documents)".
The remark was Park's first since the scandal erupted this week.
South Korea attempts to clean up corruption.
Choi accused of intervening in state affairs
CNN
South Korean affiliate JTBC broke the news of the scandal earlier this
week after revealing
that they had found an abandoned computer of Choi's
containing evidence she received secret
documents and intervened in
state affairs.
Local media and
opposition parties accused Choi of abusing her relationship with Park to
force
big local conglomerates to donate millions of dollars to two
foundations they claim was she had set up.
Choi
is also accused of pressuring a local university into giving her
daughter special treatment, including changing school regulations so her
daughter could get good grades without attending classes.
The chancellor of the university resigned last week, under mounting pressure from media and students.
A
few thousand protesters from civil organizations and labor unions are
expected to hold a demonstration
on Saturday in the center of Seoul,
according to South Korean police.
Local journalists and social media users have begun calling the scandal "Choi Soon-sil Gate".
Choi, who according to local media, is in Germany, was not reachable for comment.
South Korean Prosecutor's Office on Thursday established a "special investigation unit" to probe the cases.
While
Park will not be subject to the investigation as per the country's
criminal law, the prosecutor's office promised a thorough and quick
investigation, according CNN affiliate YTN.
The incident has hit Park's approval
ratings. Her weekly approval rate plunged to a record low of 21.1%
Thursday, according to a local pollster Real Meter.
Park,
whose presidency ends in early 2018, enjoyed approval ratings in the 30
to 50% range during her
first three years in office. This year has been
a bad year for her, however.
A
combination of a weak economy, inadequate public communications and poor
administration of state affairs, according to multiple poll results,
have resulted in slipping approval scores.
Park
Geun-hye, South Korea's first female president, is the daughter of Park
Chung-hee, South Korea's leader from 1961 to 1979, who was assassinated
by his own intelligence chief. The late Park is hailed by some as the
mastermind behind the country's current prosperity but criticized by
others as a dictator who violated human rights and crushed dissent.
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