• 2 weeks ago
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol declared an ‘emergency martial law,’ accusing the country’s opposition of controlling the parliament, sympathizing with the DPRK and paralyzing the government with anti-state activities.

Yoon made the announcement during a televised briefing, vowing to “eradicate pro-DPRK forces and protect the constitutional democratic order.” It wasn’t immediately clear how the steps would affect the country’s governance and democracy.

#southkorea #southkoreapolitics #politics #southkoreaparliament #yoonsukyeol

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00:00Yeah, this has really caught everybody by surprise. It's been a long time since a leader
00:06of South Korea has declared martial law, invoked Article 77 of the Constitution, of course,
00:13in which the president can step in, essentially to respond with the military if necessary
00:21to maintain public order. This can affect free speech. It's normally only brought in
00:26in the case of a war or a dire emergency or that sort of a threat. And it comes after
00:33a long gridlock in the National Assembly, where the main opposition Democrat Party,
00:39the left-leaning party, has a strong majority that came through the last midterm elections
00:46and essentially blocked all of President Yun Song-il's measures. But he hasn't really given
00:53us details on how this equates to being sort of a pro-North Korean activity or given any
01:01sort of detail at all on, you know, sort of what he means by this sort of insidious element
01:06of the National Assembly. So I think this, of course, is going to be the big focus tomorrow.
01:11He has already said that this will be revoked if the National Assembly, a majority in the
01:17National Assembly moves it against it. And of course, that will happen because the opposition
01:21party holds the majority in the National Assembly. So it's very confusing at this point. We don't
01:28know what particular parts of the Article 77 he wants to invoke. It has vast sweeping powers,
01:35essentially puts control over the whole state apparatus. Or if he's just thinking of small,
01:40selective ideas, everybody, of course, is wondering what's going on right now. This
01:46is really unprecedented in modern South Korean history. But I think we're going to have to
01:51wait till tomorrow. It's almost midnight here in South Korea at the moment. We're going to
01:55have to wait till the daytime to find out if he misspoke or if this is real and what it entails.

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