Manila Bulletin

Anti-Park protest thickens ahead of impeach vote

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SEOUL (AFP) – Hundreds of thousands of protestors gathered in Seoul for the sixth-straight week Saturday to demand the ouster of scandal-hit President Park Geun-Hye ahead of an impeachmen­t vote in parliament.

The latest in a series of massive antiPark demonstrat­ions in the South Korean capital came just hours after opposition parties filed an impeachmen­t motion that will be put to a vote by MPs 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.

The only real questions that remain are precisely when she will go, and whether she will step down or be removed.

The protestors who have taken to the streets in their millions in recent weeks want her out immediatel­y, but 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 two-dozen lawmakers from Park's ruling Saenuri Party.

Shifting alliances Just a week ago, the backing of enough Saenuri rebels had 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 now 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 -- much to the opposition's annoyance.

''If the motion fails to pass due to a lack of cooperatio­n from the ruling party, it must take responsibi­lity for all the consequenc­es'', the main opposition Democratic Party's floor leader Woo Sang-Ho said.

The prospect of an April departure for Park will do little to assuage the widespread public anger that has driven the mass protests in Seoul and other cities.

''Park is lying when she said she would step down voluntaril­y. Impeachmen­t is the only option left for stripping her of the office,'' said Goh Du-Hwan, a 45-year-old accountant.

Goh was among hundreds of activists who gathered for an early protest outside the Saenuri Party headquarte­rs ahead of Saturday's mass rally.

'She must go’ ''I don't regard Park as our president any more. She must go now,'' added Chung Do-Sook, 54, a former English instructor.

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 six months, with no guarantee of how the bench would rule.

The only other impeachmen­t was of then-president Roh Moo-Hyun in 2004. On that occasion, the court rejected the motion and there was a strong public backlash against those who supported it.

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