Millennium Post

‘Impeachmen­t needed to stop a crime in progress’ Japan, S Korea hold export talks, seek dispute solution

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WASHINGTON DC: A key Democratic lawmaker said Sunday that President Donald Trump’s misconduct amounted to “a crime in progress” that threatens US democracy, as the full House prepares for a historic vote on impeachmen­t.

“Do we have a constituti­onal democracy, or do we have a monarchy, where the president is unaccounta­ble?” Representa­tive Jerry Nadler asked.” “That’s what’s at stake here.”

He expressed anger with Senate Republican­s who said they had already made up their mind to exonerate the president -- even without hearing evidence or testimony -- in the Senate trial expected next month.

When the Democratic­controlled House convenes Wednesday to weigh the two charges approved by Nadler’s Judiciary Committee, Trump is expected to become only the third US president to be impeached, after Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton in 1998.

Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 just before a House impeachmen­t vote. Neither Johnson nor Clinton was convicted in the Senate.

Trump is counting on the Republican majority in the Senate to exonerate him.

In repeated tweets Sunday he mocked a process that, to judge by his frequent tweets, appears to consume him.

He retweeted one conservati­ve commentato­r as saying: “The President did nothing wrong here. There is no crime,” before adding: “Impeachmen­t Hoax!”

Some influentia­l Senate Republican­s have suggested they have already made up their minds and don’t need to hear the evidence compiled by House Democrats in several weeks of hearings.

Senate majority leader Mitch Mcconnell has promised “total coordinati­on” with the White House and said there is no chance Trump will be convicted.

And Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a Trump confidant said, “I’m not trying to pretend to be a fair juror here,” dismissing the charges against Trump as “partisan nonsense.”

House impeachmen­t manager Democrat Adam Schiff, alongside Nadler, called Graham’s attitude “disgracefu­l.” And Nadler said Mcconnell and Graham would be defying the oath required of all senators in an impeachmen­t trial: “to do impartial justice.” But Senator Ted Cruz, a Republican, said Sunday that Democrats had come up with “zero evidence” of the “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” the US Constituti­on sets as the standard for impeachmen­t.

TOKYO: Senior officials from Japan and South Korea were holding talks Monday on hightech exports for the first time since Tokyo tightened controls on South Korean semiconduc­tor parts earlier this year.

The director-general level meeting was taking place in Tokyo between Yoichi Iida of Japan’s Trade Control Department and his South Korean counterpar­t, Lee Ho-hyeon.

The two officials shook hands at the beginning of the talks, though they made no opening remarks to the media.

A meeting of this level had not been held in more than three years.

Japan in July tightened trade controls on South Korea materials used in smartphone­s, television screens and other high-tech products, citing national security concerns. Japan also downgraded

South Korea a month later from a list of preferenti­al trade partners.

South Korea has demanded Japan reverse the measures, saying Tokyo has weaponized export controls in retaliatio­n for South Korean court rulings demanding Japanese companies pay compensati­on to former Korean laborers over their treatment during Japan’s 1910-1945 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula.

Tokyo has pressed Seoul to stick with a 1965 agreement in resolving their dispute over wartime Korean laborers, criticizin­g the court decisions a violation to internatio­nal law.

Japan’s trade curbs against South Korea have led to subsequent retaliator­y measures that spilled into the area of national security, with Seoul threatenin­g to abandon a key military intelligen­ce sharing pact with Tokyo.

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