SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: The previous time South Korea’s parliament voted to impeach a president, ruling party lawmakers sobbed and hurled ballot boxes, a man set himself on fire in front of the National Assembly, and thousands glumly held candlelight vigils night after night to save late liberal President Roh Moo-hyun.
Twelve years later, the mood couldn’t have been more different, with massive crowds returning to Seoul’s streets on Saturday, a day after lawmakers voted in favor of removing disgraced President Park Geun-hye. The vote for impeachment left protesters basking in pride, believing they had repaired a damaged democracy with their weekly demonstrations.
Thousands of people marched near streets close to the presidential palace, where the notoriously aloof Park will remain mostly alone for up to six months until the Constitutional Court rules whether she must step down permanently.
Carrying signs, flags and balloons, they shouted for her to quit immediately rather than weather the court process.
The demonstrators waved their arms to the beat of gongs and drums and followed an effigy of Park dressed in prison clothes and tied with rope into a narrow alley near the presidential offices and residence, known as the Blue House.
“Park Geun-hye, get out of the house! Get out of the house now!” the marchers chanted. “Come down and go to jail!”
Tens of thousands of protesters packed a large nearby boulevard that was the center of massive protests in recent weeks.
“We got off to a good first step [on Friday]. It was a day when we all realized how strong we can collectively be,” said Kim Hye-in, 51, an out-of-towner who spent her sixth consecutive Saturday in Seoul protesting against Park. “But we aren’t there just yet. We need to keep gathering strength and protest until the court officially removes her from office.”
Protest organizers said about 600,000 people turned out on Saturday.
On Friday, the opposition-controlled parliament passed an impeachment motion against Park, stripping her of her presidential duties and pushing Prime Minster Hwang Kyo-ahn into the role as government caretaker until the court rules on Park’s fate.
The impeachment came after millions of people demonstrated for weeks demanding the removal of Park, who prosecutors accuse of colluding with a longtime friend to extort money and favors from South Korea’s biggest companies and to give that confidante extraordinary sway over government decisions. Park has apologized for putting trust into her friend, Choi Soon-sil, but has denied any legal wrongdoing.
In 2004, the Constitutional Court reinstated Roh after two months, saying that minor violations weren’t enough to justify his unseating. The chances of the court restoring Park’s powers are considered low because her charges are much graver.