Home Asia South Koreaโ€™s Main Opposition Party Plans To Impeach Acting President

South Koreaโ€™s Main Opposition Party Plans To Impeach Acting President

Acting South Korean President
File photo of Acting South Korean President Han Duck-soo

South Koreaโ€™s main opposition party plans to โ€œimmediatelyโ€ take steps to impeach Acting President Han Duck-soo, the partyโ€™s floor leader said.

The party plans to submit a bill to impeach Han Duck-soo on Tuesday, and to introduce the bill to a plenary session on Thursday, Yonhap news agency said.

The Democratic Partyโ€™s (DP) floor leader Park Chan-dae announced this after Han postponed approving legislation to launch a special counsel investigation into President Yoon Suk Yeolโ€™s failed bid to impose martial law.

Prime Minister Han took over from suspended President Yoon, who was impeached on December 14 and faces a Constitutional Court review on whether to oust him or restore his powers.

โ€œActing President Han made it clear at todayโ€™s Cabinet meeting that he would not green-light the special prosecution law,โ€ Park said.

โ€œThere is no way to interpret it other than that he is delaying time.โ€

The timing of submitting a bill to impeach Han could be decided as soon as Tuesday afternoon, local media reported.

With a majority in Parliament, DP passed bills this month to appoint a special counsel to pursue charges of insurrection, among others, against the conservative Yoon โ€“ and to investigate his wife over a luxury bag scandal and other allegations.


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Han did not put the bills on the cabinetโ€™s agenda on Tuesday, instead calling for the ruling and opposition parties to discuss the bills and other issues.

An unnamed high-ranking official from Hanโ€™s office called DPโ€™s planned move โ€œhighly regrettableโ€, according to the Newsis news agency.

โ€œThe international community is currently supporting the acting president system. Impeachment could undermine that trust, and adversely affect the economy,โ€ Newsis cited the official as saying.

Hanโ€™s office could not immediately be reached for comment.

Yoonโ€™s ruling People Power Party has accused the DP of threatening Han for not complying with their demands, at a time when South Koreaโ€™s key ally the United States has just restarted planned communications with Asiaโ€™s fourth-largest economy under Hanโ€™s stewardship.

Meanwhile, Yoon has yet to announce his legal team or appear publicly since a televised statement on December 14, the day the Parliament impeached him.

Seok Dong-hyeon, a lawyer helping form Yoonโ€™s defence team, told media persons on Tuesday that Yoon is unlikely to appear for questioning on Wednesday, Christmas Day, in response to a summons by authorities investigating his move to impose martial law.

Yoon is prioritising the Constitutional Courtโ€™s trial on whether to remove him from office or to reinstate his presidential powers, Seok said.

(With inputs from Reuters)