South Korean president vows to fight ‘until the very last minute’
SEOUL: South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol vowed on Thursday to fight “until the very last minute” in a defiant address defending his shock decision to declare martial law and deploy troops to the country´s parliament last week.
The South Korean president is barred from foreign travel as part of a probe into his inner circle over the dramatic events of December 3-4 that stunned Seoul´s allies and threw the country into some of its deepest political turmoil in years.
Yoon, staring down an impeachment vote in parliament on Saturday, vowed to “fight with the people until the very last minute”. He went on the attack against the opposition, accusing it of pushing the country into a “national crisis”.
“The National Assembly, dominated by the large opposition party, has become a monster that destroys the constitutional order of liberal democracy,” Yoon said in his televised address.
Yoon also doubled down on his justification of declaring martial law, which he had said was taken to safeguard South Korea “from the threats posed by North Korea´s communist forces and eliminate anti-state elements”.
“I apologise again to the people who must have been surprised and anxious due to the martial law,” he added.
“Please trust me.”
Saturday´s impeachment vote will take place at around 5:00 pm (0800 GMT).
PPP leader Han Dong-hoon urged party members on Thursday to attend the meeting and vote “according to their conviction and conscience”.
“President Yoon Suk Yeol is no longer able to fulfil his duties as president, and I think that has become clearer and clearer,” he said.
The opposition formally submitted a second impeachment motion against Yoon on Thursday, following last week´s failed attempt to remove him from office after ruling party lawmakers largely boycotted the vote.
The bloc needs eight MPs from the ruling party to vote in favour of the impeachment, and several ruling lawmakers have indicated their intention to do so in the next vote, scheduled for Saturday.
To impeach Yoon, two-thirds of the parliament must vote in favour.
Police meanwhile attempted another raid on Yoon´s presidential office compound, Yonhap news agency reported, a day after a similar attempt was blocked by security guards.
-
‘Disgraced’ Andrew Finally Accepts Diminished Royal Status As ‘persona Non Grata’ -
Bitcoin Plummets Toward $60,000 As Investors Dump Risky Bets -
Bitcoin Crashes Below $63K As Regulatory Pressure And Market Fears Grow -
Kim Kardashian Shares Where She Stands With Kanye West Years After Split -
Larry Fitzgerald, Drew Brees Headline New Hall Of Fame Class As Belichick Left Out -
Princess Eugenie, Princess Beatrice Distance Reports From Andrew Face Doubt -
Trump Unveils TrumpRx, Pledging World’s ‘lowest’ Prescription Drugs Prices -
Is Ellen DeGeneres Leaving The UK? -
Jaxson Dart And Girlfriend Marissa Ayers Go Public At 2026 NFL Honors -
Spurs Vs Mavericks: Wembanyama Dominates, Flagg Makes NBA History Despite Dallas Loss -
Billie Eilish's Brother Backs Singer Following Anti-ICE Grammys Speech -
Raptors Trade Chris Paul In Surprise Deadline Deal -
Major Figure Slams Bad Bunny Ahead Of Super Bowl Halftime Show -
Meghan's As Ever Launch Overshadowed By Design Error: ‘Worse Than Amateurish’ -
NFL MVP Matthew Stafford Wins 2025 Award In Razor Thin Race At NFL Honors -
Canadian Federal Government Employees Face New Return To Office Rules This Summer