South Korean secured Parliament with a weapon during the war law

South Korean secured Parliament with a weapon during the war law

A South Korean politician who on Tuesday evening before the country's National Assembly with a Convested soldiers said, like the "last defense line", to prevent the parliament enter.

political turmoil in South Korea

A particularly formative image from the current Political chaos south Koreas shows Gwi-Ryeong how they snatch his weapon for a soldier, while the MPs compete against the troops who had blocked their access to the building.

Martial law and the reaction of the politicians

These events only followed hours after President Yoon Suk Yeols dramatic explanation of the War law , which even caused a surprise within his own party and plunged the country into a phase of uncertainty.

"I asked her: 'Are you not ashamed?'," said a spokeswoman for the opposition Democratic Party while stood in front of the National Assembly on Thursday. "It is undeniably illegal that armed soldiers show weapons at citizens in the National Assembly and disturb the MPs in their work."

confrontation in front of the parliament

The video, which has now been viewed over 7 million times on the social media platform X, shows security forces that struggle with a lot of people. At, dressed in a dark jacket, you can see how she wrestles around his rifle with a soldier. The soldier judges his weapon against her as she calls: "Let me go!" Before passers -by separate the two from each other.

"During the physical examination I tried to block her with my body. When they grabbed my arm and crowded me, I fought back and think I pushed the weapon aside at that moment," she said. It admitted that she had never kept a weapon before and felt "anxious and intimidated". "But at that moment the thought of having to stop her was much stronger," she added.

the attempt to reject war law

The MPs had gathered in the middle of the night to prepare a vote against the Yoon's war law in the general meeting room. Reported that party workers and demonstrators had stacked furniture and heavy objects against the rotating entrance doors to prevent soldiers from entering the building.

"If the troops had occurred and the vote had disturbed, we could not have lifted the law of war, and we weren't here today," said. "Everything I could think was: I have to stop it. I felt like the last line that stands in the way."

success and challenges of democracy

In the Parliament, 190 MPs managed to vote against the decree, and Yoon was forced to remove war law just six hours after it was announced, in view of widespread convicts.

South Korea has shaped its identity as a lively democracy in the past four decades, which is characterized by frequent protests and protected freedoms - a hard -fought victory after a long history of bloody authoritarian rule.

, which was once moderator of the South Korean news station YTN, emphasized that the country's democratic success is based on "the power of its citizens", but expressed concerns that democracy is now "disintegrating".

political developments in view

For the coming days, it is expected that the deputies will vote on an office procedure against Yoon as quickly as possible, while the police initiated an investigation against the president and other high -ranking civil servants for treason.

Until then, the MPs of the Democratic Party refuse to leave the meeting room empty overnight. They sleep in layers either in the hall itself or in their offices to protect their constitutional right to vote against war law if Yoon decides to reintroduce it.

"If President Yoon gives a further statement of war law, the freedom of the people could be restricted," said Kang Sun-Woo, a member of the Democratic Party while spending the night in the meeting room. "If he explains it again, we will try to lift it as soon as possible with a vote."

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