Bangkok Post

Lawmakers set impeachmen­t decision in motion

-

SEOUL: South Korea’s parliament yesterday introduced an impeachmen­t motion against President Park Geun-hye, ahead of a vote seeking her ousting over a corruption scandal that has riveted the country and paralysed her administra­tion.

The motion, which accuses Ms Park of constituti­onal and criminal violations ranging from a failure to protect people’s lives to bribery and abuse of power, will be put to a full vote of the National Assembly today.

If adopted, it will go to the Constituti­onal Court for final approval which, if granted, would result in Ms Park becoming the first democratic­ally elected South Korean president not to complete her full five-year term.

Ms Park has said she would accept a parliament­ary decision to impeach her, but also that she would remain in office while the motion is being considered by the court — a process that could take months.

In the meantime, however, her powers would be suspended and transferre­d to her prime minister, leaving her with nothing but the title.

The passage to impeachmen­t has been a fitful one and to a large extent driven by massive protests that have seen millions take to the streets of Seoul and other cities in recent weeks, demanding political parties remove Ms Park if she refuses to step down.

The public pressure has been crucial in pressuring enough members of Ms Park’s Saenuri Party to support the opposition­sponsored motion and provide the twothirds majority required for adoption.

When it was filed last week, the motion carried the 171 signatures of all opposition and independen­t lawmakers — leaving it 29 short of the majority needed to clear the 300-seat chamber.

An anti-Park faction within the Saenuri party, numbering more than 30 MPs, has repeatedly hedged its options, but now looks set to support the motion, especially after party whips said members could vote according to their conscience.

“The impeachmen­t process and its result will set a new standard for governing the nation and state affairs,” said the head of the faction, Kim Moo-sung.

“I am certain that it will significan­tly reduce the abuse of power.”

The main opposition Democratic Party refused to speculate on the final outcome, but seemed quietly confident.

“Since it’s an anonymous vote, you never know until you open the lid,” said party spokeswoma­n Kang Sun-a.

The move to impeach is the result of a scandal centred on Ms Park’s relationsh­ip with a long-time friend and confidante, Choi Soon-sil.

Ms Choi is now awaiting trial on charges of fraud and abuse of power and, in a first for a sitting president, prosecutor­s have named Ms Park a suspect in the case.

Ms Choi is specifical­ly accused of meddling in state affairs and using her Blue House connection­s to force dozens of conglomera­tes to donate tens of millions of US dollars to two dubious foundation­s she controlled.

In drawing up the motion, the opposition tagged on other accusation­s against Ms Park, aside from the role she allegedly played in abetting Ms Choi’s activities.

 ?? AP ?? Protesters supporting South Korea’s President Park shout slogans during a rally opposing the impeachmen­t of her in front of the ruling Saenuri Party HQ in Seoul yesterday.
AP Protesters supporting South Korea’s President Park shout slogans during a rally opposing the impeachmen­t of her in front of the ruling Saenuri Party HQ in Seoul yesterday.
 ?? EPA ?? South Korean farmers march as they carry placards reading ‘Park Geun-hye Out’ during a rally against President Park in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, yesterday.
EPA South Korean farmers march as they carry placards reading ‘Park Geun-hye Out’ during a rally against President Park in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand