Download South Korean President Lee Myung-bak issued a public apology on Tuesday for what he said was "unsavory" conduct by people close to him, two weeks after his brother was arrested in a graft scandal that also sent some of his closest aides to jail. Lee's apology on live national TV, where he bowed deeply and said he had nobody to blame but himself, marked the latest blow to the political credibility of a leader who had vowed to clean up the corruption-prone image of South Korea's leadership. "I bow my head in apology to the people for causing concern over these matters," Lee said. "Who could I blame at this point? It is all my fault. I will willingly accept any rebuke." Lee's older brother, Lee Sang-deuk, a long-time member of parliament, was taken into custody on July 11, one week after he appeared before prosecutors to answer questions about allegations that he took money from a failed savings bank in return for favors. The scandal was part of a string of failed junior lenders, due to mismanagement, that caused thousands of mostly working class customers to lose their savings that exceeded a 50 million won ($43,600) state deposit insurance. The public mea culpa was Lee's fourth since he took office in February 2008. The imprisonment of the elder Lee, who is suspected of taking some 600 million won ($529,200) from local savings banks, was the last straw for the president as he trudges toward the end of his five-year term. |