The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

S Korea Parliament sets up impeachmen­t vote today

- JU-MIN PARK AND JACK KIM

SOUTH KOREA’S Parliament introduced a Bill on Thursday to impeach President Park Geun-hye, setting the stage for a historic vote set for Friday to oust the embattled leader engulfed in an influence-peddling scandal.

Parliament is expected to vote on Friday in favour of impeachmen­t, although the Constituti­onal Court must decide whether to uphold the motion, a process that could take up to 180 days.

Opposition parties have said they believe they will get the two-thirds majority needed to pass the bill, with support from about 30 members of Park’s conservati­ve Saenuri Party to secure the necessary 200 votes.

Park, 64, said this week she would await the court’s ruling, signalling that the country’s six-weeks-long political crisis is set to continue.

Park, the daughter of a former military ruler, is under intense pressure to resign immediatel­y, with big crowds taking to the streets of the capital, Seoul, every Saturday calling for her ouster.

Her approval rating is at a record low of 4 per cent. A Realmeter poll released on Thursday said 78.2 per cent of respondent­s wanted Park to be impeached.

She would be the first democratic­ally elected South Korean president not to serve a full five-year term.

Former President Roh Moo-hyun was impeached by Parliament in 2004, a motion that was overturned by the Constituti­onal Court which said grounds for impeachmen­t were insufficie­nt.

Park is accused of colluding with a friend and a former aide to pressure big businesses to donate to two foundation­s set up to back her policy initiative­s.

She has denied wrongdoing but apologised for carelessne­ss in her ties with the friend, Choi Soon-sil.

An impeachmen­t vote must be held within 72 hours of the motion’s introducti­on, and the Speaker of Parliament, Chung Syekyun, asked for a vote on Friday. The stakes are high for both pro- and anti-park factions.

The leaders of the two Opposition parties said their 159 members would all resign if the impeachmen­t motion failed, taking responsibi­lity for their inability to follow through on the demands of the public.

REUTERS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India