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Park Geun-hye pledges to root out corruption

The leading presidential contender of the ruling Saenuri Party on Saturday vowed to root out corruption, an apparent attempt to distance herself from President Lee Myung-bak amid a public outcry over a string of high-profile corruption scandals.

"Above all, I will create a clean government," Park Geun-hye said in a speech in the southeastern city of Busan. "I will become a president who will break the cycle of corruption."

Park Geun-hye, the ruling Saenuri Party`s former chairwoman and leading presidential candidate, gives a speech at the conservative party`s first stop on its primary campaign trail in Busan on Friday. (Yonhap News)
Park Geun-hye, the ruling Saenuri Party`s former chairwoman and leading presidential candidate, gives a speech at the conservative party`s first stop on its primary campaign trail in Busan on Friday. (Yonhap News)

It is the first time Park has mentioned corruption in her public appearances on a nationwide campaign trail to try to win the party's nomination for the December presidential election.

Her comment came four days after Lee apologized to the nation over a string of money-for-influence scandals involving one of his elder brothers and his former aides.

Lee Sang-deuk, a 76-year-old brother of Lee, was indicted earlier this week on charges that he received about 750 million won ($658,000) in bribes from two troubled savings banks and a local company.

Park's comment underscored her thinly-veiled commitment to making a clean break with the president to try to win public support for her candidacy for the nation's top political job.

She has long been a front-runner in opinion polls for the December presidential election. The ruling party is scheduled to select its presidential nominee at a national convention on Aug. 20.

Previous governments were also plagued by corruption cases in their final years in office.

In 2003, then President Roh Moo-hyun vowed to fight against corruption. However, Roh committed suicide in 2009 amid a prosecution investigation into allegations his family members took illicit funds.

Transparency International, an anti-corruption watchdog, ranked South Korea 43rd out of 183 countries in its Corruption Perceptions index in the order of corruption-free countries last year. (Yonhap News)

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