South Korean President Yoon vows to 'fight to the end', defying impeachment threat
South Korean President
Yoon Suk Yeol said on Thursday he would "fight to the end" as his own
political party shifted closer to voting with the opposition to impeach him
over his short-lived martial law order that threw the U.S. ally into turmoil.
In a lengthy televised
address, he alleged that North Korea had hacked South Korea's election commission,
casting doubt on his party's landslide election defeat in April.
Yoon, whose country
has Asia's fourth-largest economy, hopes political allies will rally to support
him but this appeared less likely after his address. The leader of his
ruling People
Power Party (PPP) said the time had come for Yoon to resign or
be impeached
by parliament.
Late on Thursday, six
opposition parties led by the Democratic Party submitted a bill for Yoon's
impeachment to parliament. A vote is expected on Saturday, a week after the
first one failed because most PPP members boycotted it.
At least seven members
of the party were expected to support the new impeachment motion. At least
eight PPP votes are needed for the two-thirds majority required to impeach
Yoon.
Yoon said the
opposition was "dancing the sword dance of madness" by trying to drag
a democratically elected president from power, nine days after his aborted
attempt to grant sweeping powers to the military.
"I will fight to
the end," he said. "Whether they impeach me or investigate me, I will
face it all squarely."
His defiance raises the
possibility that Yoon, a career prosecutor and a legal expert, may have decided
to take his chances to court, hoping to make a comeback.
A vote to impeach Yoon
would send the case to the Constitutional Court, which has up to six months to
decide whether to remove him from office or reinstate him.
Yoon is separately
under criminal investigation for alleged insurrection over the Dec. 3 martial
law declaration, which he rescinded hours later, triggering South Korea's
biggest political crisis in decades and sending economic and diplomatic shockwaves.
On Thursday, the U.S.
Forces Korea said on X Commander Paul LaCamera had spoken to South Korea's
acting defence minister to reassure Seoul of USFK's readiness to respond to
external threats while respecting South Korea's sovereignty.
About 28,500 U.S.
troops are stationed in South Korea.
Yoon said
"criminal groups" had paralysed state affairs and disrupted the rule
of law and must be stopped at all costs from taking over the government.
He was criticising the
opposition Democratic Party which has blocked some of his proposals and
demanded his wife be investigated over
alleged wrongdoing. He gave no evidence of criminal activity.
Kim Min-seok, a senior
Democratic Party member, said Yoon's address was a "display of extreme
delusion" and urged members of the president's party to join the
impeachment vote.
Yoon alleged that communist-ruled North Korea had hacked into the National Election Commission
(NEC) last year, but cited no evidence.
He said the attack was
detected by the National Intelligence Service but the commission, an
independent agency, refused to cooperate fully in an investigation and
inspection of its system.
The hack cast doubt on
the integrity of the April 2024 election - which his party lost by a landslide
- and led him to declare martial law, he said.
The commission said by
raising the suspicion of election irregularities, Yoon was committing a
"self-defeating act against an election oversight system that elected
himself as president."
The NEC said it had
consulted the spy agency last year to address "security
vulnerabilities" but there were no signs a hack by North Korea compromised
the election system.
Yoon won the presidency
in March 2022 by the narrowest margin in South Korea's democratic history.
Troops entered the
election commission's computer server room after Yoon's martial law
declaration, closed-circuit TV footage showed. It was not clear whether they
removed any equipment.
Yoon said his martial
law declaration was a symbolic move to expose an opposition plot to destroy the
country.
He denied ordering the
blockade of parliament or trying to stop it conducting business,
contradicting testimony by
a military officer who said Yoon gave him the order to enter parliament and
remove lawmakers gathering to vote to reverse the martial law declaration.
Yoon said only
experienced soldiers and not enlistees were deployed on Dec. 3 to maintain
order and ensure no civilians get hurt.
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