The Manila Times

SKorea to probe protest ‘crackdown’

- AFP PHOTO AFP

Park Geun-hye. SEOUL: South Korea will investigat­e allegation­s that ousted president Park Geun-hye planned to send military troops to quash the candle-lit protests that culminated in her impeachmen­t last year, the defense ministry said on Thursday.

Activist group the Center for Military Human Rights Korea (CMHRK), citing multiple leaks, said top military leaders had studied plans to crack down on demonstrat­ors calling for Park’s resignatio­n over a corruption scandal.

South Korea was ruled by military dictators for decades—one of them Park’s own father Park Chung-hee— and only fully embraced democracy in the 1990s, making such issues highly sensitive.

“The defense ministry will immediatel­y launch a probe,” the ministry said in a statement.

“We will announce the results of the investigat­ion in a transparen­t manner and take follow-up measures,” it added.

According to the CMHRK the plans were only set aside after the country’s top court endorsed the National Assembly’s decision to impeach Park.

The former president has been in custody since May and is awaiting a verdict after prosecutor­s called for 30 years in prison.

“The presidenti­al Blue House, the military and judicial authoritie­s were planning a pro-Park coup,” the CMHRK said in a statement.

It would have been “another bloody crackdown on protestors”, it said, after the 1980 Gwangju massacre in which some 200 pro- democracy protestors were killed by martial law troops.

The CMHRK called for a thorough investigat­ion and punishment for those responsibl­e, including the then defense minister Han Min-koo and a former commander of the capital’s defense garrison.

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