South Korea's Prime Minister Lee Wan-Koo has offered to resign, a report said Tuesday after the main opposition party said it would seek to impeach him over bribery allegations. The scandal was triggered by the suicide of a powerful businessman, who before his death alleged he had given political funds to the prime minister and two close associates of President Park Geun-Hye.
A number of top officials in Park's administration are facing bribery allegations. The president has vowed to punish "anyone" found involved in corruption, while Lee has previously ignored calls from the opposition New Politics Alliance for Democracy (NPAD) to resign.
However a report by Yonhap news agency early Tuesday said Lee's office had said in a text message that he intended to step down. The report also cited an anonymous party official as saying that Park, who is currently in Peru on a four-nation tour of South America, was likely to accept the resignation.
Lee "had thought deeply about whether it's right to express his intention to resign at a time when the president is out of the country for an overseas trip, but he has determined it would be desirable to express his desire to step down at this point," the Yonhap report cited the official as saying.
On Monday, NPAD chief Moon Jae-In told a party meeting in Seongnam, south of Seoul, that "citizens cannot wait any more". "Our party will push for a bill to dismiss him," Moon said in comments aired on television. He urged the ruling Saenuri Party to agree on a quick vote in parliament. Sung Wan-Jong, the former head of a bankrupt construction company, hanged himself on a hillside near his house in Seoul on April 9.
In his pocket, investigators found a note that listed the names of eight people - including Lee and presidential chief of staff Lee Byung-Kee - alongside figures that were alleged to indicate bribery sums. The suicide came as Sung was about to be questioned by prosecutors over allegations that he created a slush fund with embezzled company money to bribe politicians and government officials. In an earlier newspaper interview, Sung claimed to have given Lee 30 million won ($27,000) in cash in 2013 when he was running for a parliamentary seat.
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