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| South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun takes a
moment to stare at the sky as he shakes hands with cadets during their
graduation ceremony at the military academy in Seoul Mar.9, 2004. (Photo:
China Daily/Agencies) |
South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun takes a
breather to compose himself at a graduation ceremony of a military academy
in Seoul Mar.9, 2004.(Photo:China
Daily/Agencies) |
SEOUL, March 9 (Xinhuanet) -- South Korean two main opposition
parties submitted a motion to impeach President Roh Moo-hyun to the National
Assembly on Tuesday afternoon.
A total of 159 lawmakers from the biggest opposition
the Grand National Party (GNP) and the second largest opposition the Millennium
Democratic Party (MDP) endorsed the impeachment motion against Roh.
The motion came after the South Korean National
Election Commission (NEC) ruled recently that Roh had violated the electionlaw
by publicly voicing support for the pro-government Uri Party.
Roh once said openly that he would do whatever he
could within legal bounds to help the Uri Party win as many seats as possible at
the April 15 parliament general election. But the NEC defined Roh's fault as
"minor."
The two main oppositions urged Roh to make public
apology as oflast Sunday for what he had said, but the president refused to do
so.
According to some rules, the government should
maintain neutrality during the campaign of the election.
The Uri Party was organized by those lawmakers who
split from the MDP late last year and strongly back Roh. It now takes 46 seats
in the parliament.
Roh Moo-hyun won the presidential election in
December 2002 as the candidate of the MDP by defeating the candidate of the GNP
LeeHoi-chang, and took office to begin his five-year term as the top leader of
South Korea in February 2003.
However, Roh quit the MDP in last October, which lead
to the former ruling party's adoption of the anti-Roh policy.
The GNP controls 144 seats of the current 272-member
National Assembly, while the MDP holds 62 seats of the parliament.
The motion can be effective only when two-thirds of
the total 272 legislators vote for it, according to the constitution of South
Korea.
A floor vote must take place no less than 24 and no
more than 72 hours after the introduction of the motion.
If the single-house legislature approves the
impeachment, the Constitutional Court has six months to approve or reject it
with two-thirds of its nine justices.
Rightly after the opposition submitted the motion,
the Blue House, the presidential office, convened meeting of senior aids.
"The Blue House will stoically watch the proceedings
of the opposition's impeachment motion, from its introduction to its results,"
said Presidential Spokesman Yoon Tai-young after the meeting.
However, Roh himself has so far not made any response
to the motion.
Many local analysts see no high chance for the
opposition to oust the president. They pointed out the number of legislators
endorsing the motion was 20 more than the number needed for the motion to stand
in the parliament, but 22 short of two-thirds majority needed for passage.
"The opposition move is based on partisan interests
and is unlikely to succeed," said Lee Woo-yong, a professor of business
administration at Seoul's Sogang University.
Public polls also showed that most of the local
people did not agree with the impeachment motion. Some local social civic groups
said the opposition camps wanted to use their power in the parliament to gain
ballots in the coming general election.
Analysts also said the opposition did that to divert
the publicattention over the slush funds issue. The GNP and MDP have been
swamped in corruption scandals since late last year.
The prosecutions announced on Monday the mid-term
results of a four-month probe into the fundraising scandals involving the two
main parties.
The GNP has been found to receive 82.3 billion won
(70 million US dollars) illegal funds from local business conglomerates
duringthe 2002 presidential election, while the MDP has been found to accept
11.3 billion won (9.6 million dollars) illegal donations.
The Uri Party has already expressed its will to block
the impeachment bill. And if the National Assembly failed to hold ballot on the
motion as of Saturday, it would be null automatically. Enditem
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