South Korean President Removed From Office
The president of South Korea, Park Geun-hye,
has been forced out of office after the country's constitutional court upheld a
parliamentary vote to impeach her over allegations of corruption and cronyism.
Two
protesters died during demonstrations that broke out in the South Korean
capital, Seoul, after the unanimous judgment was handed down in a live
broadcast that gripped the nation.
The decision
brings the career of Park, South Korea's first female leader, to an inglorious
end. It also plunges South Korea into a state of political uncertainty at
pivotal moment for the region, as North Korea ramps up its nuclear weapons
testing program.
South
Korea's political stability is crucial to the security of the region -- it is a
key buttress against North Korea, its provocative neighbor, and a major trading
partner with the US and its Asian neighbors.
A supporter of South Korean President Park Geun-hye cries
during a rally opposing her impeachment.
A statement from acting President Hwang Kyo-ahn called for
unity. "We all need to respect the decision of the constitutional court.
There will be people who cannot accept this and find it hard to submit to this,
but now is the time to accept and end the conflict and opposition."
An election for her replacement must be held within 60 days.
An adhoc Cabinet meeting will be held soon, a government official told CNN.
With Park's ruling conservatives looking ut of favor, it
seems likely the country will turn to the left-wing opposition. which has
signaled it would be likely to pursue a policy of engagement with the North. A
left-wing government would also place into question the continued deployment in
South Korea of a US missile defense system, which is bitterly opposed by China.
As the
announcement was made, anti-Park demonstrators on the streets of Seoul cried
tears of joy and pumped fists in celebration, as applause rang out from the
crowd.
Thousands of Park's supporters waved South Korean flags as
they stood on main thoroughfares near the Constitutional Court. They were
hemmed in by a ring of police officers, many wearing protective armor, and
police vehicles.
A group of around 100 Park supporters tried to break through
police lines near the court, and a number of people fell and were injured.
"We lost our liberty. We lost our Korea," one protestor told CNN's
Paula Hancocks live on air.
"We cannot understand impeachment for our
president," another said. "She is still our president, tomorrow she
will be our president."
Critics of Park celebrated wildly. Many had camped out in
the streets during long winter nights, protesting her tenure as leader by
holding candlelit vigils.
Park was
brought down by a corruption scandal that has dominated South Korean politics
for months and has entangled the acting head of Samsung.
The president was accused of being unduly influenced by her
longtime friend and adviser, Choi Soon-sil, who is on trial for abuse of power
and fraud. Local media and opposition parties accused Choi of abusing her
relationship with the president to force companies to donate millions of
dollars to foundations she set up. She denies all charges against her.
Lee Jae-yong, acting head of Samsung, is on trial for
charges of bribery and corruption, which he also denies. Prosecutors allege
that Lee, 48, pledged tens of millions of dollars to win favor with Park and
secure government support for a merger that helped tighten his grip on on the
company.
In December, lawmakers voted to impeach Park by a vote of
234 to 56, stripping away her executive powers. Since then she has remained in
the presidential Blue House, but has remained largely out of public view.
On Friday, the Constitutional Court upheld the impeachment,
ruling that Park abused her authority in helping Choi raise donations from
companies. "We announce the decision as the unanimous opinion of all
judges. We dismiss the defendant President Park," said Justice Lee
Jung-mi.
Park will not leave the presidential palace, known as the
Blue House, immediately, a spokesman told CNN. The ruling means Park loses the
protection from prosecution she enjoyed as president. She could now face a
formal investigation.
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