Saturday, December 14, 2024

South Korea impeachment live: Thousands take to streets as second vote to impeach Yoon Suk Yeol begins

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Key events

Voting is now beginning. The process has been explained to lawmakers. We’ll bring you the result as soon as we get it.

Tens of thousands of people have braved the bitter cold and poured onto the streets of the capital, Seoul, every night for the past two weeks, calling for Yoon’s ouster and arrest. They shouted slogans, sang, danced and waved K-pop light sticks. Smaller groups of Yoon’s conservative supporters — still in the thousands — have also been rallying in Seoul, denouncing attempts to impeach the president. Both rallies have largely been peaceful.

“Many people are using idol light sticks even though they are expensive. I think it’s become a really great culture because people are bringing their most precious and brightest possessions to express their will and opinions,” said Hong Gayeong, a 29-year-old protester, near the National Assembly.

Here is the scene outside parliament in Seoul:

People shout slogans during a rally to demand South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol’s impeachment outside the National Assembly in Seoul. Photograph: Lee Jin-man/AP
Thousands holding American and South Korean national flags take part in a pro South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol rally. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
A rally to demand South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol’s impeachment outside the National Assembly. Photograph: Kiim Do-hoon/AP

Justin McCurry

Park said South Korea’s democracy owed much to the pro-democracy protests in the southern city of Gwangju in 1980, when demonstrators were killed and injured in a bloody crackdown. “Martial law should only be proclaimed when the state is in an emergency or a state of war,” Park said of Yoon’s short-lived declaration on 3 December. “However, those conditions did not exist.”

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“Yoon Suk Yeol is the leader of this insurrection,” Park has declared.

“If it weren’t for citizens who rushed to the National Assembly, South Korea would not be different from 1980,” Park Chan-dae has said, referencing the 1980 Gwangju massacre that occurred under military rule and said that without the South Korean people’s intervention, the country would have been taken back to 1980 by Yoon’s declaration.

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Park Chan-dae, the floor leader of the Democratic party of Korea – the main opposition party – is reading out the reasoning for impeaching the president, including the content of his martial law declaration.

The National Assembly session debating the impeachment of the president, Yoon Suk Yeol, is now under way.

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President’s party to vote against impeachment – reports

Justin McCurry

Justin McCurry

South Korea’s ruling party has decided to maintain its official position to vote against the impeachment of president Yoon Suk Yeol, local media has reported.

Last Saturday’s first impeachment vote ended in disarray after most members of Yoon’s conservative People Power party (PPP) boycotted the impeachment vote. But PPP lawmakers are expected to turn up to vote today.

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Opening summary

Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the continuing political crisis in South Korea, where the parliament is preparing to vote for the second time on a motion to impeach the president, Yoon Suk Yeol, after his failed attempt to impose martial law.

Thousands of people have already taken to the streets of Seoul today in rival rallies for and against Yoon, hours ahead of the impeachment vote.

Protests demanding Yoon step down kicked off around midday outside the National Assembly, which will vote at 4pm (0700 GMT) on an impeachment resolution – a week after a first attempt to remove Yoon for the martial law debacle failed.

Police expect at least 200,000 people to demonstrate in support of removing him.

On the other side of Seoul near Gwanghwamun square, thousands more rallied in support of Yoon, blasting patriotic songs and waving South Korean and American flags.

Two hundred votes are needed for the impeachment to pass, meaning opposition lawmakers must convince eight parliamentarians from Yoon’s conservative People Power party (PPP) to switch sides. Seven have pledged to do so.

Here’s what else happened this week:

  • Yoon defended his shock decision last week to impose martial law in a defiant and lengthy TV address on Thursday, vowing to “fight until the end” attempts to remove him from office. He repeated claims that he had been trying to defend the country from anti-state forces

  • On Wednesday, police raided Yoon’s office, in an attempt to establish whether Yoon’s actions amounted to insurrection. It emerged later that Yoon’s security guards had prevented officers from getting into the main building

  • Yoon’s former defence minister and one of his close associates, Kim Yong-hyun, tried to kill himself at a Seoul detention centre on Wednesday night, but was stopped by correctional officers. He had been arrested on allegations of playing a key role in a rebellion and committing abuse of power, becoming the first person formally arrested over the martial law decree

  • The country’s police chief and the head of Seoul’s metropolitan police were also detained for sending their forces to the national assembly. Lawmakers voted on Thursday to impeach the police chief and the justice minister.

  • Yoon was banned from leaving the country on Monday, and on Tuesday authorities banned more senior officials from leaving, including Cho Ji-ho, the commissioner general of the Korean National Police Agency. Already under a travel ban were the former defence and interior ministers and the martial law commander, Gen Park An-su.

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