AFP - After the South
Korean parliament's impeachment of President Park Geun-Hye, the spotlight now
shifts to the nine judges of the Constitutional Court who could yet
slam the
door on those seeking to remove her from office.
The lawmakers' vote
on Friday suspended Park's sweeping executive powers, but it requires final
approval by a two-thirds majority of the court -- a lengthy and uncertain
process that could take up to six months.
On paper, the court
might be expected to favour Park, as nine of its justices were appointed by her
or her conservative predecessor, Lee Myung-Bak.
But public opinion
is hugely in favour of removing Park from the presidential Blue House, with the
most recent opinion polls showing support for impeachment running at around 80
percent.
So the justices will
be under extreme pressure to uphold parliament's decision, especially as the
opposition-sponsored impeachment motion was adopted with the support of a
significant number of lawmakers from Park's own ruling Saenuri Party.
Park's downfall was
triggered by a scandal involving her close friend, Choi Soon-Sil, who is now
awaiting trial on charges of using her presidential ties as leverage to squeeze
tens of millions of dollars from local companies.
Park is also accused
of leaking confidential state documents to Choi, who has no official title or
security clearance, but was apparently allowed to meddle in state affairs
including senior appointments.
The 40-page
impeachment bill charged the president with multiple constitutional and
criminal violations ranging from a failure to protect people's lives to bribery
and abuse of power.
- Decide or wait -
Many of the charges
were based on the initial findings of prosecutors conducting an official
investigation into the Choi scandal which will only wrap up in March or April
next year.
Given that it has
180 days to reach a decision, the court could decide to wait for the
investigation to conclude, but that would throw up separate procedural problems
with one justice slated to retire in January and another in March.
With Park sidelined
and the acting president -- her prime minister -- expected to keep a low
profile, both seats on the bench would likely remain vacant.
That could leave the
impeachment motion requiring the approval of six out of only seven justices,
rather than six out of nine.
In its initial
reaction to Friday's vote, the court said it would expect Park's legal team to
submit a written response to her impeachment within a week.
"We have
reached an agreement that this impeachment is an extremely significant case
that requires prompt progress," court spokesman Bae Bo-Yoon told
reporters.
"The court will
hold more meetings down the road considering the gravity of the issue and form
a task force of researchers to examine how to approach the case," Bae
said.
Kim Jong-Dae, a
former constitutional justice, suggested the court would be swayed by the wave
of public anger that pushed lawmakers to introduce and pass the impeachment
bill.
Millions have taken
to the streets of cities across the country in a weekly series of mass protests
over the past two months, calling for Park's ouster.
- Public pressure -
"The Blue House
says it takes the public opinion displayed by the candle-lit rallies very
seriously. So do constitutional court judges," Kim said in a recent radio
interview.
"Public
servants by nature are bound to follow public opinion," he said, adding
that the court may try to speed up its deliberations to minimise the disruption
caused by the current power vacuum.
If the court
confirms the impeachment, Park will be permanently dismissed with immediate
effect and fresh presidential elections will have to be held within 60 days.
She is the second
South Korean president to be impeached by lawmakers.
The late Roh
Moo-Hyun faced the same ordeal in 2004 when lawmakers took issue with remarks
he made that were seen as violating election law.
But the case never
enjoyed popular support and backfired in the face of large pro-Roh rallies and
an eventual decision by the court to reject the impeachment vote.
Roh Hee-Bum, a
lawyer who used to be a researcher at the court, said public sentiment should
not be a factor.
"Presidential
impeachment is based on facts and a judgement as to whether the president
committed serious enough legal offences," Roh said.
AFP
0 Comments