Yahoo – AFP,
Hwang Sunghee, Park Chan-Kyong, November 12, 2016
Seoul (AFP) - Pressure on South Korea's scandal-hit president to resign escalated sharply Saturday, with organisers claiming a million-strong turnout at one of the largest -- and loudest -- anti-government protests the country has ever witnessed.
![]() |
| Demonstrators attend a protest against South Korean President Park Geun-Hye in Seoul on November 12, 2016 (AFP Photo/Jeon Heon-Kyun) |
Seoul (AFP) - Pressure on South Korea's scandal-hit president to resign escalated sharply Saturday, with organisers claiming a million-strong turnout at one of the largest -- and loudest -- anti-government protests the country has ever witnessed.
Chanting
"Step down Park Geun-Hye!" enormous crowds, including high school
students, Catholic nuns, labourers, farmers, retirees and young couples with
babies, massed in the streets of central Seoul in a powerful display of popular
anger and dissent.
While
police put the turnout at 260,000, organisers said one million people took part
in what was the third in a series of weekly protests over a corruption scandal
that has left Park fighting for her political survival.
On the back
of official appeals for calm, police deployed around 25,000 officers, many of
them in full riot gear, while police buses and trucks blocked every access road
-- major or minor -- around the presidential Blue House.
As night
fell, Seoul's main ceremonial boulevard Gwanghwamun became a moving river of
flickering candles held by the banner-waving, slogan-chanting demonstrators
calling on Park to quit.
"It
was our wedding anniversary yesterday but we cancelled our anniversary trip and
came to Seoul because we thought it was more important for our daughter,"
said Cho Joo-Pyo, who came with his wife and their two-year-old.
Cho's
family had travelled from Jeonju, around 200 kilometres (120 miles) south of
Seoul -- one of tens of thousands who travelled from cities across the country
to participate in the biggest anti-government rally since the pro-democracy
protests of the late 1980s.
![]() |
Long
exposure photograph shows protesters holding candles during an
anti-government
rally in central Seoul on November 12, 2016 (AFP Photo/
Jeon Heon-Kyun)
|
Fraud and
scandal
The scandal
engulfing Park for the past three weeks has focused on her close friend, Choi
Soon-Sil, who is currently under arrest on charges of fraud and abuse of power.
Prosecutors
are investigating allegations that Choi, 60, leveraged their friendship to
coerce donations from large companies like Samsung to non-profit foundations
which she set up and used for personal gain.
She is also
accused of interfering in government affairs, despite holding no official
position.
Lurid
reports of the unhealthy influence Choi wielded over Park have seen the
president's approval ratings plunge to five percent -- a record low for a
serving president.
And
Saturday's rally was a focal point for a litany of other complaints, from
plunging rice prices to the government's handling of the 2014 Sewol ferry
disaster.
One group
dressed in traditional funeral gear carried a large "presidential
coffin" covered with a banner reading: "Step down Park Geun-Hye,
killer of agriculture, farms and farmers."
The
family-friendly protest was peaceful but sometimes reached deafening volumes as
performers and activists whipped the crowds into a raucous frenzy from a giant
stage.
"We're
so close to the Blue House. Let her hear us roar!" yelled one speaker who
was rewarded with a massed bellow of approval.
![]() |
Protesters
hold placards calling for the resignation of South Korean President
Park
Geun-Hye during an anti-government rally in central Seoul on November 12,
2016
(AFP Photo/Jung Yeon-je)
|
Spurned
apologies
In an
effort to soothe public anger, Park has issued several public apologies,
voicing her personal "heartbreak" at being the cause of such
widespread anger and distress.
She has also
reshuffled top officials and even agreed to relinquish some of her extensive
executive powers, but the popular calls for her to step down have been
relentless.
"She
has apologised but I don't think it was sincere," said college student Ahn
Ye-jin.
"As
Korean citizens, it is up to us to bring about change in this country and that
is why I am here today. Park has to go," Ahn said.
Most
experts have suggested the president, who has just over a year left of her
single five-year term, will be able to ride out the crisis and remain in
office, albeit with her authority and ability to govern seriously undermined.
Opposition
lawmakers have largely avoided direct resignation calls and appear more
interested in extracting further concessions from Park in terms of devolving
power to the legislature.
But the
sheer size and volume of Saturday's demonstration will be impossible to just
ignore.
"Judging
from what I saw today, people's resentment against her is simply too strong for
Park to stare this down," said Lee Yeon-Ho, a political science professor
at Yonsei University.
"People
are literally seething with anger," Lee said.



No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.