Rival rallies erupt in South Korea before judging the President’s Imperans | News of the courts

Pro and anti-President Yoon Suk-Yool Protests gathered in the capital of South Korea before the court ruled deciding whether to be disqualified with duty.
A large number of southern Koreans gathered in the capital in Seoul to support or opposed the impection President Yoon Suk-Velol on the eve of the court’s decision on whether his Declaration of Martial Law disqualified him from duty.
On Saturday, protesters filled the great square in central Seoul and sang for the current removal. Several streets remote, Conservative Yoon fans occupied the entire Avenue and called for a return as they waved to the flags of South Korea and the United States.
In a few days, it is expected that the Constitutional Court will decide whether to expel Yoon after trying to declare a war law in December 2024, rattling markets and burning the worst political crisis in the country.
If the court judge against Yoon, he will officially be thrown out of office and the national elections for the heir will be held within two months.
Yoon is also being tried for criminal charges for uprising, But he was released in custody Last week.
Deep social breaks
The imposition of the former president and the imposition of the law and his relegation expanded the deep social schisms between the conservatives and the liberals, which in turn exerted pressure on the institutions and the army whether to impose an order.
Since then, protests for Pro-Ion have taken to the streets in hundreds of thousands of weeks.
On Friday, the survey of Gallup Korea found that 58 percent of respondents supported the Yoon recess, while 37 percent opposed.
Song Young-Sun, a 48-year-old protester, told Reuters news agency that Yoon’s prison edition last week is “incredibly” frustrating.
“That’s how I came here this week, hoping that the Constitutional Court will decide the case of impeution next week,” Song said.
However, Kim Hyung-Joon, a 70-year-old protester of Pro-Yoon, told Reuters that he hoped that the court would make a “precise judgment and dismiss the case.”
However, the most significant question of the court for resolving and deciding is why Yoon sent hundreds of soldiers and police officers to the National Assembly after declaring war law.
While Yoon said he wanted to hold a command, some top military and police officers sent there that the president ordered them to pull out politicians to block the gathering rally about his decree or detained their political rivals.