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New York Queens Chronicle:  February 2, 2017,  Reported by Victoria Zunitch
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Flushing crowd to S. Korea: Don¡¯t impeach
by Victoria Zunitch, Chronicle Contributor | Posted: Thursday, February 2, 2017 10:30 am
 
Flushing crowd to S. Korea: Don¡¯t impeach 1
More than 300 people rallied in Flushing on Saturday, urging South Korea not to impeach its embattled president, Park Geun-hye.
Waving American and South Korean flags and chanting ¡°Down with traitors!¡± and ¡°Shame on the National Assembly!,¡± more than 200 people demonstrated in Flushing Saturday against the impeachment in process against South Korean President Park Geun-hye.
¡°If President Park is impeached, no more free South Korea,¡± said Ellen Kang, leader and organizer of the NYC Korean Patriotic Assembly.
¡°They want to close South Korea like Vietnam,¡± Kang said.
President Park was impeached on Dec. 9 by the South Korean parliament, known as the National Assembly, by a wide margin of 234-56, on accusations of helping a friend to lean on businesses for donations to foundations that had been created to support her policies.
In order for the impeachment to be final, the nation¡¯s Constitutional Court needs to rule on the impeachment. It has six months from Dec. 9 to make a decision, but it¡¯s expected to rule as early as mid-February.
Park has apologized for carelessness but denied wrongdoing.
A movement to oust the president as a result of the accusations is known as the Candlelight Movement.
But many of Sunday¡¯s demonstrators, made up of both American-born and Korean-born Korean Americans with strong feelings about their families¡¯ nation of origin, said the Candlelight Movement is made up of people who are either extreme leftists, spies or just misguided.
¡°The core of that movement, we are convinced, are spies, Communist North Korean spies,¡± said Sunny Hahn, who also helped to organize the demonstration.
The demonstration was held between 3 and 4 p.m. in front of the McGoldrick Library, at the convergence of Roosevelt Avenue and Northern Boulevard. A few NYPD officers were present at the start of the rally, reminding participants and organizers to be mindful of traffic safety.
The group sang the South Korean national anthem and other songs, listened to speeches and participated in chants.
Hahn said that South Korea learned from the 1997 defection of high-ranking North Korean defector Hwang Jang-yop that tens of thousands of spies had posed as North Korean defectors to South Korea but are, instead, spies.
She and several other attendees, including several organizers of the demonstration, said they hold to right-wing politics and believe that South Korea has been infiltrated by the spies who have, over time, joined with leftist South Koreans to oust the president.
Sin-U Nam, a past leader of the Citizens¡¯ Alliance for North Korean Human Rights, said the emphasis shouldn¡¯t be on left versus right.
¡°We are conservatives. We are right-wing activists. But we are fighting for the good,¡± Nam said.
¡°This is good and evil. The fight is against evil,¡± he said.
Nam also believes that spies and traitors are behind the push to oust Park.
¡°We cannot trust even the Constitutional Court. There are nine judges. Three or four are for the other side,¡± he said.
Nam credits Park with trying to save the country by reaching out to the United States, United Kingdom and other governments to corner and isolate North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un.
But Nam said the National Assembly, the press and the prosecutors instead have ¡°cooked up this phony scandal.¡± He sees the current charges as amounting to allowing outsiders into the inner circle of power, which he doesn¡¯t believe rises to the level of treason or criminality that is required for impeachment.
¡°The traitors in South Korea, the red traitors, I call them, have been working on this scandal for a long time.¡±
Young Kun Kim, a veteran of the South Korean Army who fought in the Vietnam War, said through a translator, ¡°What¡¯s happening in South Korea these days looks very similar to what happened in Vietnam.¡±

 
   
 

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