Most Popular
-
1
Seoul prepares for first major military parade in ten years
-
2
Opposition leader Lee attends arrest warrant hearing at Seoul court
-
3
[Korea Beyond Korea] Early Koreanists 'on verge of extinction overseas'
-
4
Is S. Korea dangerous for women?
-
5
S. Korea holds rare military parade, warns NK against nuclear attack
-
6
Young swimmer enjoys self-fulfilling prophecy in gold medal-winning race
-
7
Chief justice seat at top court left vacant amid Assembly chaos
-
8
S. Korean fencer Oh Sang-uk wins gold in men's individual sabre
-
9
[Herald Interview] S&P economist tells Korea to brace for worst-case scenario with China
-
10
Trilateral talks open on Korea-Japan-China meeting
Park won't attend APEC summit this month: foreign ministry
By Lim Jeong-yeoPublished : Nov. 8, 2016 - 17:01
President Park Geun-hye will not attend an Asia-Pacific leaders’ summit next week, the foreign ministry said Tuesday, as she is grappling with an influence-peddling scandal involving her longtime confidante.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs' spokesman Cho June-hyuck cited the grave security situation on the Korean Peninsula as the official reason for her absence from the meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) scheduled for Nov. 17-19 in the Peruvian capital of Lima.
“Given the severity of the security situation on the Korean Peninsula, including North Korea's latest fifth nuclear test, a decision was made in September that the president would not attend this year's APEC summit meeting," Cho said.
"Regarding who will be attending, (the government) is monitoring related conditions and keeping open all possibilities," he said, adding that the final decision will be announced early next week.
Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn or Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se will reportedly join the regional forum on behalf of Park.
Earlier in the day, Park met with National Assembly Speaker Chung Sye-kyun to demand the parliament pick the next prime minister who will take control of government affairs in the aftermath of the snowballing scandal involving Choi Soon-sil, accused of meddling in government affairs and pressing conglomerates into making donations to two foundations she effectively controlled. (Yonhap)