Philippine Daily Inquirer

3 SoKor parties to impeach Park

Main opposition groups dismiss Park’s offer to resign as a stalling tactic

- —AP

SEOUL— South Korea’s three main opposition parties agreed yesterday to stick to their plans to impeach President Park Geunhye, dismissing as a stalling tactic her offer to resign if parliament arranges a safe transfer of power.

Park’s conditiona­l resignatio­n offer on Tuesday came as she faces nose-diving approval ratings and massive street rallies calling for her ouster amid a huge political scandal involving her and a longtime shadowy confidante.

“The people of South Korea do not want to enter the new year with Park Geun-hye as president,” Choo Mi-ae, leader of the main opposition Democratic Party, said at the start of the meeting.

“There is only one way under our constituti­on to halt a term of a president and that’s an im- peachment motion,” Choo added.

After the meeting, the three parties told a joint news conference that Park must step down immediatel­y without setting any conditions and that their push for her impeachmen­t remained unchanged.

Impeachmen­t motion

The opposition parties agreed to put an impeachmen­t motion to a vote as early as this Friday or meet again if this plan doesn’t work, according to Yonhap news agency.

The opposition have previously said they would try to impeach Park either this Friday or on Dec. 9, when a parliament­ary plenary session is scheduled.

Support from two-thirds of the 300-member parliament is needed to impeach Park.

The three opposition parties and anti-Park independen­t lawmakers have a total of 172 seats, meaning they need help from dissenters in Park’s ruling Saenuri Party.

It was unclear how much Park’s overture could divide those who earlier supported her impeachmen­t.

But some in the Saenuri Party have already raised the need to review whether to try to impeach her or come up with other ways for her departure.

If impeached, Park’s presidenti­al powers are immediatel­y suspended until the Constituti­onal Court makes a ruling on her fate. The court has 180 days of deliberati­on.

Park, in her Tuesday speech, continued to deny accusation­s by prosecutor­s that she colluded in the criminal activities of her longtime friend Choi Soon-sil, who, despite having no official role in government, allegedly had a say in policy decisions and exploited her presidenti­al ties to bully companies into giving large sums of money to businesses and foundation­s that Choi controlled.

“If the ruling and opposition parties discuss and come up with a plan to reduce the confusion in state affairs and ensure a safe transfer of government­s, I will step down from the presidenti­al position under that schedule and by processes stated in law,” she said.

Park refused to take any question from journalist­s after her comments.

Prosecutor­s have indicted Choi, two ex-presidenti­al officials and a music video director known as a Choi associate for extortion, leaking confidenti­al documents, and other charges.

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