In South Korea, six opposition parties today, December 4, submitted to the National Assembly a bill to impeach President Yoon Sok Yol, which imposed martial law in the country the day before, writes Yonhap, reports UNN.
Details
According to Yonhap, the impeachment bill is planned to be submitted to the plenary session of the National Assembly on December 5, and then vote for it on December 6-7.
The document calls the reason for impeachment that "President Yoon declared martial law, violating the Constitution and laws, violating the principles of popular sovereignty and separation of powers.
The impeachment proposal must be put to a vote within 24 hours and 72 hours after it is announced at the plenary session. impeachment of the president must be proposed by a majority of members of the National Assembly and approved by more than two-thirds of the members of the National Assembly, writes Yonhap.
It is reported that if the impeachment bill is rejected due to insufficient votes, the opposition party plans to hold an extraordinary session of the National Assembly after the end of the regular session on the 10th and again propose the impeachment bill.
addition
The Turks have mutilated the Young by denouncing the "high-ranking" military camp, having moved the position of the land into "paralysis" in a row with "anti-power" actions. For the first time in Seoul, there were souties between the hromadians and the Russians, they blocked the parliament.
It became clear that the Cabinet of Ministers of the Republic of Korea voted for the military camp introduced by President Yun Seok-yol.
South Korean President Yoon Sok Yule announced the suspension of martial law (AP) declared on December 3.
causes of the political crisis in South Korea
According to the BBC, in the parliamentary elections held in South Korea this spring, 192 of the 300 seats in the National Assembly were won by the Democratic Party.
As a result of the crushing defeat that the president's power of the People Party received in the elections, the leader of this party, Han Dong Hong, resigned and the country's Prime Minister, Han dok su, resigned.
The media wrote that the vote in the spring elections could be considered as an interim referendum on confidence in President Yoon Sok Yule, who still has three years in power.
The BBC's Seoul correspondent Jake Kwon recalls that after the parliamentary elections lost by his party, the president was unable to pass the laws he needed, but he had to desperately veto any laws passed by the opposition.
This week, the Democratic Party reduced the budget proposed by the government and the president's party, but Yoon Sok Yule cannot veto it.