The Phnom Penh Post

‘Million’ rally over S Korea scandal

- Park Chan-kyong

UP TO 1.3 million protesters braved sleet and freezing temperatur­es in Seoul on Saturday to demand President Park Geun-hye resign over a corruption scandal or face impeachmen­t, organisers said.

Participan­ts raised candles and sung while chanting “Arrest Park Geun-hye” and “Throw Park into jail”, with cries from the main rally site reportedly reaching the presidenti­al Blue House some 1.5 kilometres away.

The figure offered by organisers would make this the largest of a series of huge weekly protests that began a month ago in the South Korean capital, after an influence-peddling scandal engulfed the president.

Police put the turnout 260,000.

At 8pm (1100 GMT) demonstrat­ors put out their candles, only to relight them a minute later as a warning that their protests would not burn out until Park left office.

“I don’t think Park would step down voluntaril­y, but we need to raise our voice as much as possible to encourage parliament to push through with its move to impeach her,” Lee Seung-cheol, a 23-year-old student, said.

The largely peaceful rallies – attended by parents and their children, university students and Buddhist monks – are among the biggest seen in South at Korea since the pro-democracy protests of the 1980s.

Park has issued public apologies over the scandal involving her confidante Choi Soon-sil, who has been arrested for fraud and abuse of power, but has defied repeated calls to resign. Choi is also accused of interferin­g in government affairs, despite holding no official position.

The 60-year-old allegedly leveraged her relationsh­ip with Park to coerce donations from conglomera­tes, including SK, Lotte and Samsung, to nonprofit foundation­s which she set up and used for personal gain.

Park has promised to submit herself to an expanding probe by prosecutor­s, as well as a separate investigat­ion by an independen­t special prosecutor to be appointed by parliament.

Neverthele­ss her approval ratings have plunged to a record low for a sitting president as top advisers and some of South Korea’s most powerful companies are caught up in the ever-widening scandal.

The headquarte­rs of SK, Lotte and Samsung were raided by state prosecutor­s last week along with the offices of the Finance Ministry and state pension fund.

A parliament­ary vote to impeach Park could take place as early as this week as a growing number of ruling party politician­s back the opposition-led campaign to oust the president.

People power

A poll last week indicated that nine out of 10 South Koreans want Park kicked out of office.

“I came here because I wanted to show my children that it’s the people who own this coun- try, not those in power,” Shim Kyu-il, a 47-year-old company employee, said.

There was a festive mood among protesters, with many wearing raincoats and clutching umbrellas to protect themselves from the cold and wet weather.

Top singers joined the protest, turning the event into something like a giant rock concert interspers­ed with chanted slogans and mass dances.

Buddhist monks wearing grey robes recited a sutra while other protestors simulated Park, Choi and Samsung scion Lee JaeYong being led into prison.

Trucks carried loudspeake­rs blaring “Park get out now”.

Yang Duk-joon, 53, said he and other farmers had taken a bus from the southern provincial city of Muan to join the protest.

“We’re here to oust Park who ruined this country,” he said, adding the rice price had fallen 40 percent this year compared with a year earlier.

If parliament passes the impeachmen­t motion, Park would be suspended from official duties and replaced by the prime minister. The Constituti­onal Court would need to approve the impeachmen­t.

“Even though the Constituti­onal Court is deemed conservati­ve, they would be unable to defy the people’s wish to oust Park”, Kang Won-taek, a political science professor of the Seoul National University, said.

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON/AFP ?? Protesters take to the streets of Seoul on Saturday for a rally calling for South Korean President Park GeunHye to step down.
AHN YOUNG-JOON/AFP Protesters take to the streets of Seoul on Saturday for a rally calling for South Korean President Park GeunHye to step down.

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