Arab Times

Rally calls for leader’s ouster

Growing demands for Park to face charges

-

SEOUL, Dec 3, (Agencies): Hundreds of thousands of protestors marched in Seoul for the sixth-straight week Saturday to demand the ouster and arrest of scandal-hit President Park Geunhye ahead of an impeachmen­t vote in parliament.

Organisers claimed a turnout of more than one million for the candleligh­t rally in the South Korean capital, while police put the number at just over 200,000.

It was the latest in a series of massive anti-Park demonstrat­ions and came just hours after opposition parties filed an impeachmen­t motion that will be put to a vote by lawmakers on Friday.

Whether the motion is adopted or not, Park is firmly on course to become the first democratic­ally-elected South Korean president not to complete a full, five-year term.

The 64-year-old stands accused of colluding with an old friend who has been formally indicted for attempted fraud and abuse of power.

Along with the now-normal slogans for Park to step down, there were growing calls at Saturday’s rally for her to face criminal charges, arrest and imprisonme­nt.

Dozens of life-size cardboard cutouts of the president showed her wearing jail uniform and bound by ropes.

While the protestors want her out immediatel­y, the political establishm­ent is struggling to find a similar unity of purpose.

The impeachmen­t motion introduced in the early hours of Saturday morning carried 171 signatures — accounting for every legislator from the three opposition parties and independen­ts.

In order to secure the two-thirds majority required for impeachmen­t in the 300-seat national assembly, it will need the support of more than twodozen lawmakers from Park’s ruling Saenuri Party.

Just a week ago, the backing of enough Saenuri rebels seemed assured, but a rather confused resignatio­n offer by Park on Tuesday strengthen­ed the hand of her loyalists who insist she be allowed to step down voluntaril­y.

The party has since proposed she resign in April — a timeline it justifies as more conducive to a calm and steady preparatio­n for an early presidenti­al election.

Observers say the Saenuri rebels are likely to fall in line with the proposal and vote against the motion on Friday.

The prospect of an April departure for Park will do little to assuage the public anger that has driven the mass street protests of recent weeks.

“I no longer believe a word the president or her party says,” said bank employee Kim Hak-Won who was marching Saturday with his teenage daughter.

“How can we tell our children to respect the law when our own president refuses to do so?” Kim said.

And there was widespread anger with the Saenuri party over what were seen as its efforts to block the impeachmen­t process.

Party

“I am so full of rage right now, I could set fire to the party headquarte­rs,” said 30-year-old office worker Park Sung-Jin.

But even if impeachmen­t were approved by the assembly on Friday, Park would likely remain in office for some considerab­le time.

An adopted motion would still require approval of the Constituti­onal Court — a process that could take up to six months.

Saturday’s mass rally culminated in a march to the presidenti­al Blue House, led by 50 protestors holding flaming torches.

Following a court order, police allowed the marchers within 100 meters of the complex housing Park’s residence and offices.

As well as the huge crowd in Seoul, there were reports of large rallies elsewhere including 100,000 people in the southeast city of Daegu — considered a staunch Park stronghold.

The scandal that has engulfed Park and paralysed her administra­tion has focused on her friendship with longtime confidante Choi Soon-Sil.

Choi has been charged with meddling in state affairs and using her Blue House connection­s to force dozens of conglomera­tes to donate around $70 million to two foundation­s she controlled. In a first for a sitting South Korean president, Park has been named a “suspect” by prosecutor­s investigat­ing Choi.

As president, Park cannot be charged with a criminal offence except insurrecti­on or treason, but she would lose that immunity once she steps down.

Thousands of demonstrat­ors, led by the relatives of a 2014 ferry disaster that killed more than 300 people, mostly teenagers on a school trip, jammed the alley near the presidenti­al office, shouting for hours for Park’s arrest, not just her resignatio­n.

Some protesters angrily threw flowers at police, who had created tight perimeters around the street, and demanded that officers get out of the way.

“We not once were allowed on this street in the past year and seven months. I have long dreamed of the day I stand here with citizens,” said Jeon Myeon-seon, one of the parents of the teenagers who died in the ferry disaster, which was partially blamed on government incompeten­ce and corruption. “We will continue to join this fight with our fellow citizens until the full truth is out on how this government defrauded its people.”

Thousands also rallied near the National Assembly to pressure parties, including Park’s conservati­ve ruling party, to vote for her impeachmen­t next week.

Opposition parties controllin­g South Korea’s parliament had earlier planned to call for a vote this past week, but were threw off after Park made a conditiona­l offer Tuesday to leave office, which left them squabbling over timing.

Park’s overture has also caused cracks among dissenters in her conservati­ve ruling party who had earlier backed her impeachmen­t, an alarming developmen­t for opposition parties, which don’t have enough votes to push through the impeachmen­t motion themselves.

“I am full of anger, but also worried,” said Ray Kim, an out-of-towner who participat­ed in the Seoul protests for the second consecutiv­e week. “It would leave a terrible historical example if millions protested for weeks against a crime-committing president but she was able to shake it off.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait