The document at the heart of what has become a heated political row, is the official record of remarks made at the 2007 summit between then South Korean president Roh Moo-Hyun and North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il.
Last year, lawmakers from Park's ruling conservative party whipped up a storm over leaks sourced to the National Intelligence Service, suggesting that Roh had offered the North a major compromise over the disputed western sea border.
Park won the election, beating the opposition candidate Moon Jae-In, who had served as Roh' presidential chief of staff.
As the debate intensified over what Roh actually said at the 2007 summit, the decision was taken to consult the official transcript kept in the presidential archive.
But when officials went looking, they couldn't find it -- prompting the ruling and opposition parties to trade fresh accusations of skullduggery.
"The unheard-of incident of an important presidential record disappearing was an attempt to shake national discipline and erase history," the agency quoted Park as saying.
"It should have never happened," she added, without suggesting who might be responsible for the disappearance.
Her Saenuri Party has been less reticent.
"Unimaginable things are happening now," it said in a statement last month."It made us wonder if the original transcript of the inter-Korean summit was destroyed on former President Roh's order."
NIS agents stand accused of trying to manipulate voters online against Moon Jae-In's candidacy.
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