Lawmakers of the South Korean legislators vote the revision of the rules around the Martial Law, now withholding any attempt to prevent legislators to enter the National Assembly.
It comes after the former president of the Martial Law Yool in December, which puts the country in a political crisis.
While military forces gathered in front of the National Assembly that night, legislators needed to contradict the walls to vote Yoon command.
Thursday change also prohibits military and police from entering the National Assembly without the speaker’s consent.
Yoon declares martial law on 3 December 2024 while his political problems grow, from Parliamentary Deadlock to corruption scandals.
He admits that the shack transfer protects the country from “anti-state” forces pity in North Korea, but gives little evidence to support that.
The crisis that shooks to South Korea, who endured decades of military rule before the democratic election again in the late 1980s.
Senior officials of Yoon administrative abandoned and arrested for their decision on December decision. Yoon himself was moved and taken from office, and now tried for revolt.
The months of political uncertainty are no ruling people in the power of Yoon troubled. An election of Snap in June saw Lee Jae Lee Jae Myung won the Presidency.
In a Seoul press conference on Thursday marking 30 days in the office, Lee told reporters that his North Korea owner – a steady stand of the Communist regime.
South Korean politics remains bitterly divided. If Parliament approved Lee’s choice for the Prime Minister on Thursday, the vote was stolen at the Yoon Party, now the main opposition.