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South Korea: Opposition Pushes to Impeach Yoon Sukyeol, Defence Minister Resigns

author DW
Dec 05, 2024
According to the South Korean Yonhap news agency, the opposition is seeking a vote by Saturday (December 7).





South Korea’s opposition Democratic Party on Thursday introduced a bill to impeach President Yoon Sukyeol over his brief declaration of martial law, while ministers began tendering resignations.

“The Yoon regime’s declaration of emergency martial law caused great confusion and fear among our people,” Democratic Party member Kim Seungwon told the National Assembly as the impeachment motion was tabled.

“The people and the aides who protected parliament protected us with their bodies. The people won, and it’s now time for us to protect the people,” he continued.

“We need to immediately suspend the authority of President Yoon. He has committed an indelible, historic crime against the people, whose anxiety needs to be soothed so that they can return to their daily lives.”

According to the South Korean Yonhap news agency, the opposition is seeking a vote by Saturday (December 7).

By law, the motion will be scrapped if it isn’t voted on within 72 hours of its parliamentary introduction.

Yoon’s party to oppose impeachment bill

Yoon’s ruling People Power Party (PPP) has stated its intention to oppose the motion, but the opposition needs only eight defections for the bill to pass.

18 PPP lawmakers already voted to rescind Yoon’s martial law order in an emergency sitting in the early hours of Wednesday morning, and party leader Han Dong-hun has called the President’s actions “unconstitutional.”

Nevertheless, he said his party will still vote against impeachment to prevent “prevent damage to citizens and supporters caused by unprepared chaos.”

If Yoon were to be impeached and suspended from exercising power, Prime Minister Han Ducksoo would fill in as leader, according to South Korea’s constitution.

Were he to resign or be otherwise removed from office, new elections would be held within 60 days.

Ministerial resignations

In the meantime, Yoon on Thursday accepted the resignation of Defense Minister Kim Yonghyun, who initially proposed the idea of declaring martial law – according to both the impeachment filings and one senior military official.

Yoon has nominated Choi Byunghyuk, a retired four-star general and currently South Korea’s ambassador to Saudi Arabia, as a replacement.

The finance, education and justice ministers are also planning to resign from their posts, according to Yonhap.

The moves come 24 hours on from a night of chaos in Seoul when Yoon took the unprecedented decision to declare martial law, only to lift it a few hours later following a unanimous vote by the National Assembly.

The vote took place in an emergency midnight sitting as parliamentary aides kept armed troops out of the chamber using furniture blockades and fire extinguishers.

‘Political suicide’

On Wednesday, US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said that Yoon had made a serious misjudgment.

“This is a powerful symbol of the fact that people were prepared to come out and make clear that this was a deeply illegitimate process,” he said. “One that would be met by the will of the people, and frankly, the will of the legislative bodies.”

One analyst told the Associated Press that Yoon’s actions were “political suicide.”

This report first appeared on DW.

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