logo
Farmers on tractors, trucks march on Seoul, calling for Yoon Suk Yeol's impeachment

Farmers on tractors, trucks march on Seoul, calling for Yoon Suk Yeol's impeachment

Korea Herald25-03-2025

A convoy of tractors and trucks rolled into southern Seoul on Tuesday, as members of the Korean Peasants League held a protest calling for the impeachment of suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol.
The protest was scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. at Namtaeryeong Pass in Seocho-gu, southern Seoul, where members of the Korean Peasants League — many of them farmers from rural provinces — gathered with flags and banners, chanting slogans demanding Yoon's immediate removal.
The group announced plans to march toward Gwanghwamun in central Seoul, but was blocked by police at the pass, resulting in a standoff between protesters and police on the southern edge of Seoul as they entered from surrounding Gyeonggi Province.
By Tuesday afternoon, traffic near Namtaeryeong began to slow, with farm vehicles and heavy trucks stuck on the roads, causing significant congestion along major routes in the area.
The use of tractors in the protest, in particular, was a central point of dispute between the group and authorities.
Earlier on Sunday, the Seoul Metropolitan Police announced it had issued a ban on the use of tractors in their march, citing concerns over public safety and traffic congestion.
In response, the group filed for an injunction against the ban, and the court accepted their request — allowing up to 20 trucks through between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m., but explicitly prohibiting tractors from entering the city.
However, the Korean Peasants League criticized the decision as an excessive infringement of the freedom of assembly and moved ahead with both trucks and tractors as planned, defying the court's partial restriction.
To maintain public order and prevent clashes between opposing protest groups, the Seoul Metropolitan Police also mobilized 27 mobile police squad units — totaling some 1,700 officers — with additional support from nine units dispatched by the Gyeonggi Nambu Provincial Police.
'The police will guarantee the freedom of assembly to the fullest extent within the boundaries permitted by the court,' the Seoul police said in a statement. 'However, any actions that go beyond what has been allowed will be met with strict enforcement based on law and principle.'
According to official protest notices filed with the police, around 2,000 protesters calling for Yoon's impeachment and 3,000 opposing it were expected to participate in rallies throughout the day.
Tuesday's rally marked the Korean Peasants League's second tractor-led protest in recent months. In late December, the group attempted to march to the presidential residence in Hannam-dong in a convoy of about 30 tractors, resulting in a 28-hour standoff with police at Namtaeryeong.
Many people flocked to the site in the middle of the night to show solidarity with the farmers against what they said was an unfair use of the police's authority to protect the president, and they eventually marched to Hannam-dong. However, several leaders of the protest were later booked for investigation.
With the Constitutional Court expected to deliver its ruling on Yoon's impeachment later this week or early next week, demonstrations from both sides are anticipated to remain intense at least until the verdict is announced.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former President Yoon Suk Yeol's aides offer to resign
Former President Yoon Suk Yeol's aides offer to resign

Korea Herald

time15 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

Former President Yoon Suk Yeol's aides offer to resign

Odd coexistence expected between President Lee Jae-myung and Yoon's ministers Ministers and vice ministers of the former Yoon Suk Yeol administration submitted their resignations to the Ministry of Personnel Management on Monday, a day before the June 3 presidential election. President Lee Jae-myung is expected to receive their resignation letters, but many speculate that the newly elected president will selectively accept resignations to minimize an administrative void. Dismissing all the Cabinet members at once would make it impossible for the new government to convene meetings, as Article 88 of the Constitution stipulates that the Cabinet is 'composed of the President, the Prime Minister and 15 to 30 ministers.' The quorum for a Cabinet meeting is a majority of the 21 members. Ministers and vice ministers under former President Park Geun-hye, who was South Korea's first president removed by impeachment in a Constitutional Court ruling in 2017, also submitted resignations en masse on May 8, 2017, two days before the early election. But former President Moon Jae-in only accepted the resignation of then-Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn and decided to delay accepting the remaining ministers' resignations. Since Lee started his term without a presidential transition committee after removing the former president, like Moon, Lee is expected to hold several Cabinet meetings with ministers from Yoon's government.

[Editorial] A crucial vote amid crisis
[Editorial] A crucial vote amid crisis

Korea Herald

timea day ago

  • Korea Herald

[Editorial] A crucial vote amid crisis

South Koreans vote to elect new leader following Yoon's ouster over martial law South Koreans went to the polls on Tuesday in what may come to be seen as one of the most pivotal elections in the nation's modern democratic history. The June 3 vote was called after the dramatic downfall of former President Yoon Suk Yeol, who was impeached and removed from office earlier this spring for attempting to invoke martial law in December 2024. Against a backdrop of economic malaise, diplomatic strain and a public weary of political dysfunction, the election became a test not only of leadership but of institutional resilience. Voters appeared engaged despite a dispiriting campaign. Turnout in advanced voting reached 34.74 percent — the second highest since the introduction of early voting in 2014 — suggesting a public alert to the stakes. Yet the process itself was marred by logistical lapses. The National Election Commission came under fire for mismanagement, with critics warning that such failures could undermine procedural legitimacy at a moment when public trust is already fraying. The frontrunner heading into the Election Day was Lee Jae-myung of the liberal Democratic Party of Korea, a sharp-elbowed populist who has, in recent months, sought to soften his image and reposition himself as a pragmatist. A former governor and one-time presidential contender who narrowly lost to Yoon in 2022, Lee returned to the national stage promising diplomatic realism and a business-friendly policy approach. His principal rival, Kim Moon-soo of the conservative People Power Party, is a former labor activist turned hard-right loyalist who remained closely aligned with the disgraced Yoon. As of press time, the final result had yet to be declared. But barring a late upset, Lee's sustained advantage in polls suggested he was on track to win. If there was a decisive loser in this campaign, it was the quality of public discourse. Policy debate was scarce. Personal invective, theatrical gestures and hastily assembled populist pledges dominated the three televised debates. Substance took a back seat to spectacle. Both major candidates offered sweeping economic proposals, including trillion-won supplementary budgets and emergency task forces to stimulate growth. The divergence lay more in emphasis than in content: Lee cast himself as a reformer intent on resetting the terms between capital and labor; Kim struck a more orthodox note, emphasizing security and traditional conservative themes. The Democratic Party's legislative tactics added further volatility. In early May, the party pushed through amendments to the Criminal Procedure Act and the Public Official Election Act — changes that could delay criminal trials for sitting presidents and redefine legal boundaries for campaign statements. Critics called the move an effort to shield Lee from ongoing investigations. The perception that institutional rules were being bent to serve political ends hung heavily over the race. Whoever assumes office will inherit a formidable to-do list. The economy is sputtering under the weight of falling exports, sluggish domestic spending and rising fiscal burdens. US President Donald Trump has imposed heavy tariffs on Korean goods and raised doubts about the durability of the security alliance. North Korea's weapons program continues apace, while maritime tensions with China in the West Sea remain unresolved. Domestically, political polarization runs deep, exacerbated by a campaign that stoked division rather than dialogue. This election was never just about choosing a new head of state. It was about reaffirming democratic norms in the wake of a constitutional crisis. The damage wrought by Yoon's overreach cannot be allowed to define the country's political future. The incoming president must not only claim a mandate but embody it by restoring public trust, re-engaging internationally and showing restraint in the exercise of power. Losing candidates, too, bear a responsibility: to respect the outcome and resist the temptation to turn disappointment into obstruction. Democracy is sustained not merely by ballots but by norms, responsibility and restraint. South Korea has faced darker chapters and emerged stronger. Let this be such a moment: a turn from rupture to repair, from disarray to accountability. The people have spoken. Now the burden of democracy shifts to those they have chosen to lead.

Lee Jae-myung promises to end 'political, economic crisis' in victory speech
Lee Jae-myung promises to end 'political, economic crisis' in victory speech

Korea Herald

timea day ago

  • Korea Herald

Lee Jae-myung promises to end 'political, economic crisis' in victory speech

Democratic Party of Korea's presidential candidate Lee Jae-myung on Wednesday pledged to end the political crisis caused by former President Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law, revive the faltering economy, achieve peaceful coexistence of the two Koreas and strive for national unity as in a victory speech after Tuesday's election. Speaking in front of about 5,000 people who gathered near the National Assembly in Yeouido, Seoul, Lee said he would restore democracy and bring an end to hatred between people and focus on addressing people's burden from the rising cost of living. Lee also said that peace on the Korean Peninsula through dialogue, communication and coexistence will also play a crucial role in "preventing people's livelihoods from further worsening." Lee also expressed gratitude to those who voted for him, describing himself as "a person with high chance of winning" the presidential election. "Since the night of the Dec. 3 insurrection until now ... I tried to prove that all power exercised by the president comes from the people ... not for the personal benefit of the president," said the 60-year-old. "Now, after six months have passed, you have finally proven with your vote that we hold the political power in this country." This followed his visit to the Democratic Party headquarters in Yeouido, as he made the first public appearance since the vote count began, in front of his home alongside his wife Kim Hye-kyung. Lee and Kim left their home in Incheon at around 11:50 p.m. Tuesday. "The people's great decision deserves respect," Lee said, pledging to do his utmost to meet people's expectations, minutes after broadcasters called the election for Lee. Lee is set to assume the presidency immediately after the election authorities confirm Lee's victory. There is no transition period, since the previous president, Yoon Suk Yeol, was ousted via impeachment. According to Yonhap News Agency, Lee was considering nominating four-term Democratic Party lawmaker Rep. Kim Min-seok as the prime minister, three-term lawmaker Rep. Kang Hoon-sik as his chief of staff, and Lee Han-joo, former head of the Institute for Democracy — a think tank of the party — as the director of national policy at the presidential office. Lee was expected to officially announce his nominations later Wednesday, Yonhap added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store