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    South Korean opposition plans new impeachment

    AFP – South Korea’s main opposition party said yesterday it will try again to impeach President Yoon Suk Yeol after his declaration of martial law.

    Meanwhile police arrested the defence minister in charge of the martial law operation, and the interior minister resigned. Both they and Yoon are being investigated for alleged insurrection.

    Yoon averted impeachment late Saturday as huge crowds braved freezing temperatures in another night of protests outside Parliament to demand the president’s ouster.

    Opposition parties proposed the impeachment motion, which needed 200 votes in the 300-member Parliament to pass, but a near-total boycott by Yoon’s People Power Party (PPP) doomed it to failure.

    Leader of the main opposition Democratic Party (DP) Lee Jae Myung said yesterday that they will try again on December 14. “Yoon, the principal culprit behind the insurrection and military coup that destroyed South Korea’s constitutional order, must either resign immediately or be impeached without delay,” Lee told reporters.

    “On December 14, our Democratic Party will impeach Yoon in the name of the people.”

    SOFT COUP

    In exchange for blocking his removal from office, Yoon’s People Power Party (PPP) said that it had “effectively obtained (Yoon’s) promise to step down”.

    “Even before the president steps down, he will not interfere in state affairs, including foreign affairs,” PPP leader Han Dong-hoon said yesterday after a meeting with Prime Minister Han Duck Soo.

    This will “minimise the confusion to South Korea and its people, stably resolve the political situation and recover liberal democracy”, Han told reporters.

    But Lee and the National Assembly Speaker Woo Won-shik, both from the opposition Democratic Party (DP), yesterday called the arrangement illegal.

    “For the prime minister and the ruling party to jointly exercise presidential authority, which no one has granted them, without participating in constitutional processes to address unconstitutional martial law, is a clear violation of the Constitution,” Woo said.

    People take part in a protest calling for the ouster of South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol outside the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea. PHOTO: AFP
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