By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Debacle in South Korea
Continuing from our earlier reporting South Korean President Yoon
Suk Yeol has defended his failed attempt last week to impose military rule on
the country as the leader of his party signals it is preparing to support his
impeachment on Saturday.
In only his second
public appearance since his doomed martial law gambit, Yoon on Thursday morning
December 12. lashed out at critics, calling them “anti-state forces”, and
suggested North Korea had helped leftwing opposition parties secure victory in
parliamentary elections.
His defiance followed
a speech by Han Dong-hoon, the leader of Yoon’s
conservative People Power party, who said the president had not abided by an
agreement to transfer decision-making over state affairs to his cabinet,
leaving impeachment as the only means to protect the
country’s democracy.
“We have tried to
look for other options that reduce uncertainties that may be tied with
impeachment, but the [basis] for that was that the president agree to early
resignation from office,” Han told reporters. “But as the president has no
intention to do so, other options are not viable.”
Han’s announcement
suggests the president’s political fate could be resolved within days,
following a week of turmoil during which neither the government, the party nor
the presidential office could confirm who was in
charge of the country.
Eight out of 108
People Power lawmakers must vote for an impeachment motion if the National
Assembly is to secure the required two-thirds majority for it to pass. The
party boycotted an impeachment vote last week, but a second vote is expected to
be scheduled for Saturday, December 14.
“Impeachment is now
inevitable,” said Kang Won-taek, a professor of
political science at Seoul National University. “It is not that the [People
Power party] never wanted to impeach him [in principle], but last week was too
early for them to take a decision when there was still little information
available as to his motives.
“But now there is growing
evidence, including this public address, that the president did do this out of
his conviction,” said Kang.
Yoon, who is subject
to a travel ban as he is investigated on insurrection charges, said his martial
law order had been an administrative decision that could not be scrutinized by
law enforcement agencies.
The president also
said that on the night of his martial law decree, he had dispatched troops to
the country’s electoral commission to inspect its systems for signs that North
Korean hackers had manipulated April parliamentary elections in which opposition
parties triumphed.
Yoon’s defiant
appearance comes after senior military commanders told a parliamentary hearing
on Wednesday that on the night of the martial law attempt, the president had
issued direct orders for lawmakers to be physically prevented from voting to
reject his decree.
Special forces
commander Lieutenant General Kwak Jong-geun testified
that Yoon had told him to “break open the door and drag lawmakers out” because
“they have not reached a quorum yet.”
If an impeachment
motion is passed, it must then be approved by the country’s Constitutional
Court. In the meantime, the president is suspended from duties, and authority
is passed to the prime minister on an interim basis.
The court is supposed
to deliver its verdict within 180 days of the parliamentary vote, but this time
limit is not binding.
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