South Korea confirms President Yoon's survey and displaces him out of workplace

South Korea's accused President Yoon Suk Yeol arrives on January for his office in the Constitutional Court in Seoul, South Korea.

Kim Hong-Ji | Reuters

The South Korean Constitutional Court on Friday confirmed the elevation of President Yoon Suk Yeol and pushed it out of office.

The decision now begins with a 60-day countdown in which a presidential election must be held to select the next president. In the meantime, Prime Minister Han Duck-Soo was rejected as the reigning president after a decision by the Constitutional Court on March 24.

In a charisma on South Korean television, the reigning head of the constitutional court, Mond-Bae, said the decision was unanimous.

Moon said that the former president's declaration of war law did not meet the legal requirements for a national crisis.

He added that Yoon had violated the law by sending troops to the country parliament in order to stop the reversal of war law after a translation by local media Yonhap.

After the decision, South Korea Kospi Slid by 0.59%, but the small cap Kosdaq rose by 0.74%. The South Koreans won strengthened by 1%.

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Yoon was charged on December 3 in a surprising late-evening program for his imposition of war law and quoted the need to protect the country from “North Korean Communist Armist” and “anti-state forces”. This was the first time that war law has been explained in South Korea for over 40 years.

The legislators then voted in the parliament of the country in the parliament of the country in the parliament of the country, before submitting applications against Yoon a few days later. Yoon was charged on December 14th and suspended from the office.

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