South Korean leader makes rare public appearance as scandals threaten presidency

South Korean President Park Geun-hye, right, talks with Seomun Market Merchant Association President Kim Yong-oh. (Kim Jun-bum/Yonhap via AP)

South Korean President Park Geun-hye, center left, escorted by Seomun Market Merchant Association President Kim Yong-oh, tours the Seomun Market which was burned by a recent fire. (Kim Jun-bum/Yonhap via AP)

South Korean President Park Geun-hye, center right, is escorted by Seomun Market Merchant Association President Kim Yong-oh, center left, during her visit to the Seomun Market which was burned by a recent fire. (Kim Jun-bum/Yonhap via AP)

South Korea's embattled president on Thursday made an emotional appearance among her citizens for the first time since an escalating scandal exposed her links to million-dollar extortion, a cult leader who served as a personal mentor, and her government's mass purchases of Viagra and similar drugs.

President Park Geun-hye visibly teared up during her visit to a rural market as parliament lawmakers squabbled over whether to impeach her. The string of controversies has led hundreds of thousands of people to protest in the streets of South Korea for more than a month.

A protester wearing a mask of the president performs Wednesday during a rally calling for Park to step down in Seoul. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

"Merchants (here) supported me whenever I had difficulties and I'm really sorry," Park said during her visit, according to her office. "I agonized a lot over whether I should come here in the current situation."

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Park has denied prosecutors' accusations that she knowingly played a role in the criminal activities of her longtime friend, Choi Soon-sil. The friend, despite having no official role in government, allegedly had a say in policy decisions and exploited her presidential ties to bully companies into giving millions of dollars to businesses Choi controlled.

Choi is a daughter of a cult leader who served as Park's personal mentor after her mother's assassination in 1974. Park's father was gunned down by his spy chief in 1979 following an 18-year rule.

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Choi claimed she asked her father to help Park after being told to do so in dreams, Korean media reported.

Officials detained and indicted Choi and two of Park's former advisers on charges including extortion and leaking confidential information.

In addition, Park's office bought 60 Viagra pills and 304 generic pills last year, opposition lawmaker Kim Sang-hee revealed last week, citing medical insurance data. Presidential spokesman Jung Youn-kuk claimed that the government intended to use the medication not for erectile dysfunction, but to treat altitude sickness, The New York Times reported.

Jung said earlier this year that Park, who is single, had visited Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda -- nations with capital cities high above sea level -- but did not use the pills.

Police said they arrested a 48-year-old man who told investigators he used paint thinner to set fire to the birthplace of Park's late father on Thursday because he was angry over her refusal to step down immediately.

A memorial hall for Park's parents, ex-President Park Chung-hee and Yook Young-soo, nearly burned to the ground. The hall is a popular tourist attraction.

The suspect was previously convicted of setting fire to the birthplace of another former president, Roh Tae-woo, in 2012, according to police.

Park didn't immediately comment publicly on the arson. Earlier Thursday, she visited a market in the nearby city of Daegu where hundreds of shops had been destroyed by a previous fire.

Daegu is Park's political home turf where she was elected as a national lawmaker four times before becoming president in 2013.

Local TV showed dozens of people at the market shouting "Park Geun-hye! Park Geun-hye!" and using phones to photograph her as she walked through the fire-ravaged shops. One middle-aged woman wiped away tears. Near the market, though, dozens of anti-Park citizens staged rallies calling for her ouster, according to media reports.

Park cried after returning to her car, her office said, citing presidential security staff who traveled with her.

On Tuesday, Park said she would step down if parliament arranged a safe transfer of power, drawing fierce criticism from main opposition parties that described her overture as a tactic to buy time that would allow her to survive the scandal.

Park's offer appeared to have caused cracks among dissenters in her ruling party who earlier supported her impeachment. A group of anti-Park lawmakers is now saying they won't join an impeachment drive if Park resigns in April and helps ensure a stable power transfer until a new president takes office following a presidential by-election.

A meeting between leaders of the main opposition parties on Thursday ended without any breakthrough. They differed over whether they should push for Park's impeachment this week or delay it.

Much of the hesitation over Park's impeachment was because the opposition did not have enough lawmakers to pass an impeachment in parliament, and they would need help from dissenters in Park's ruling Saenuri Party.

Passage of an impeachment motion requires at least 200 votes in the 300-member National Assembly, but the three opposition parties and anti-Park independent lawmakers have a total of 172 seats.

If impeached, Park's presidential powers would be suspended until the Constitutional Court rules on her fate. The court would have 180 days to deliberate.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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