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S Korea cabinet offers to resign over US beef row
South Korea's cabinet offered to resign on Tuesday after an unpopular deal to widen the market to US beef imports sparked massive street protests against the government which has been in office barely three months.
- A South Korean housewife participates in a rally against US beef imports in in Seoul.
- Image Credit: ap
Seoul: South Korea's cabinet offered to resign on Tuesday after an unpopular deal to widen the market to US beef imports sparked massive street protests against the government which has been in office barely three months.
"The prime minister offered the cabinet's resignation at the regular meeting this morning with President Lee Myung-bak," a spokeswoman at the prime minister's office said.
Local media has speculated that Lee, whose pro-business reforms to rebuild Asia's fourth largest economy have been slowed by the protests, would accept the resignation of at least three ministers and several top aides.
The farm, education and health ministers are seen as most likely to go within the next few days. The foreign and finance ministers could also go as Lee tries to show that his government has started a new chapter.
Yonhap news agency quoted an unnamed source at the prime minister's office as saying: "The prime minister offered the resignations for the entire cabinet to take responsibility over the beef saga".
The beef deal was seen as helping a separate bilateral free trade pact that US congressional leaders said they would not ratify unless Seoul fully opened its market to US beef.
But the issue has become a lightning rod for a wide range of grievances against the conservative leader's policies, particularly from left-leaning groups and labor unions.
Lee stormed to victory in a December election but his support has slumped to about 20 percent after 100 days in office as the backlash against his government has mounted.
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