S. Korean president apologises over political deadlock

South Korea's President Park Geun-Hye bows after a live television address in Seoul on March 4, 2013. Park made a public apology Monday for a political deadlock blocking the formation of her government at a time of heightened nuclear tension with North Korea

South Korea's new president, Park Geun-Hye, publicly apologised Monday for a political deadlock blocking the formation of her government at a time of heightened nuclear tension with North Korea. Since being sworn in a week ago, Park has had to work without a functioning cabinet because of opposition to her government restructuring plans that have affected parliamentary confirmation of her ministerial nominees. "I'm very sorry for causing anxiety to the people," Park said in a live television address, citing "serious" and "unprecedented" delays caused to the running of state affairs. It has been a damaging false start to Park's five-year term, which faces many challenges including how to deal with North Korea following Pyongyang's nuclear test last month. The focus of the parliamentary deadlock is Park's bill to reorganise the government structure, creating new ministries and offices, and reallocating responsibilities. One of the bill's flagship proposals would set up a Future Creation and Science Ministry to spearhead Park's vision of a new "creative economy" that moves beyond the country's traditional manufacturing base. But opposition parties have rejected plans for the new ministry to take over broadcast policy-setting rights, currently handled by an independent state watchdog. Park's address on Monday came shortly after her nominee to head the new science ministry stepped down in apparent frustration at the parliamentary impasse. Dismissing the opposition concerns, Park insisted that her proposals were aimed at boosting South Korea's competitiveness and she urged parliament to pass the bill and allow her administration to get to work.