Petition calling for impeachment of South Korea’s president forces response

South Korea economy struggling amid falling exports, low inflation, high unemployment

Mr Moon, a liberal human rights lawyer, won the presidency in an election in May 2017, ending nine years of conservative rule. Photograph: Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images
Mr Moon, a liberal human rights lawyer, won the presidency in an election in May 2017, ending nine years of conservative rule. Photograph: Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

A petition calling for South Korean president Moon Jae-in to be impeached had gathered more than 217,000 signatures as of Monday, passing a threshold that will require a government response and underscoring Moon’s sagging approval ratings.

The author of the online petition has not been identified but says he or she is a citizen who took part in candlelight protests in 2017 that helped lead to the impeachment and ouster of Mr Moon's predecessor, Ms Park Geun-hye.

“I think there’s no problem for proposing impeachment of a president who acts against the national psyche,” the petitioner wrote on a site for petitions that the presidential office, known as the Blue House, maintains on its web site.

The government has to respond to any petition that gathers more than 200,000 signatures.

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The petitioner said Mr Moon has condoned North Korea's nuclear development, human right problems and illegal transhipment of North Korean coal, while "acting nonsense" such as lowering the military guard while North Korea has its nuclear weapons.

A spokeswoman for the Blue House did not comment on the specifics of the petition, saying: “My understanding is that the Korean government or relevant official of the Blue House will answer in due course.”

Stagnating economy

Mr Moon, a liberal human rights lawyer, won the presidency in an election in May 2017, ending nine years of conservative rule.

He has maintained wide support compared with some of his predecessors, but over the past year, with a stagnating economy and stalled talks with North Korea, his base of support has narrowed.

Some 44 per cent of respondents in a Gallup Korea poll said Mr Moon was doing a bad job, data showed on Friday, up more than four times the rate a year ago when his approval was at its highest after his first summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

Among those respondents, 50 per cent expressed frustration with Mr Moon’s economic policy, while 13 per cent criticised his focus on North Korea and his North Korea-friendly policies.

Asia’s fourth largest economy is struggling amid falling exports, low inflation, and high unemployment rates. Exports fell for a fifth month in April, while inflation has fallen below 1 per cent. The unemployment rate rose to a three-month high in April.

The inter-Korean relationship as well as nuclear talks between the United States and North Korea have also been stalled since the breakdown of the second summit in Hanoi in February. – Reuters