Berliner Boersenzeitung - Right-wing YouTubers back South Korea president's last stand

EUR -
AED 3.788155
AFN 72.718944
ALL 98.254223
AMD 409.346438
ANG 1.859197
AOA 940.590458
ARS 1064.181145
AUD 1.658917
AWG 1.859006
AZN 1.757387
BAM 1.959274
BBD 2.082893
BDT 125.330411
BGN 1.957016
BHD 0.388562
BIF 3051.010003
BMD 1.031349
BND 1.413206
BOB 7.12864
BRL 6.376009
BSD 1.031629
BTN 88.519962
BWP 14.337423
BYN 3.375986
BYR 20214.435919
BZD 2.072074
CAD 1.48985
CDF 2958.427993
CHF 0.937122
CLF 0.037784
CLP 1042.570254
CNY 7.550096
CNH 7.588886
COP 4490.389416
CRC 525.832398
CUC 1.031349
CUP 27.330742
CVE 110.459258
CZK 25.172546
DJF 183.291709
DKK 7.46185
DOP 63.011731
DZD 140.018257
EGP 52.337863
ERN 15.470232
ETB 131.72088
FJD 2.399128
FKP 0.81681
GBP 0.830193
GEL 2.903288
GGP 0.81681
GHS 15.16489
GIP 0.81681
GMD 74.776758
GNF 8917.682996
GTQ 7.959113
GYD 215.713087
HKD 8.021955
HNL 26.217234
HRK 7.397768
HTG 134.748935
HUF 415.922732
IDR 16708.262636
ILS 3.760901
IMP 0.81681
INR 88.467396
IQD 1351.396275
IRR 43419.783638
ISK 144.162329
JEP 0.81681
JMD 160.623257
JOD 0.731643
JPY 162.238422
KES 133.333166
KGS 89.727705
KHR 4161.378891
KMF 480.737487
KPW 928.213318
KRW 1512.854968
KWD 0.318175
KYD 0.859624
KZT 541.389984
LAK 22505.815871
LBP 92381.609613
LKR 303.027323
LRD 190.327486
LSL 19.360442
LTL 3.045305
LVL 0.623853
LYD 5.069941
MAD 10.404849
MDL 19.203051
MGA 4883.422458
MKD 61.557456
MMK 3349.780579
MNT 3504.522991
MOP 8.265456
MRU 41.272584
MUR 49.041024
MVR 15.886627
MWK 1788.771822
MXN 21.278463
MYR 4.644918
MZN 65.907033
NAD 19.36063
NGN 1590.549917
NIO 37.956752
NOK 11.72114
NPR 141.63214
NZD 1.837511
OMR 0.396811
PAB 1.031579
PEN 3.872009
PGK 4.132287
PHP 60.032238
PKR 287.294827
PLN 4.272724
PYG 8075.240591
QAR 3.760614
RON 4.976159
RSD 117.09216
RUB 113.890921
RWF 1441.155434
SAR 3.873342
SBD 8.646369
SCR 14.602044
SDG 620.360077
SEK 11.457574
SGD 1.413055
SHP 0.81681
SLE 23.518534
SLL 21626.871185
SOS 589.545373
SRD 36.131761
STD 21346.837283
SVC 9.025873
SYP 2591.294979
SZL 19.354381
THB 35.585296
TJS 11.270422
TMT 3.620034
TND 3.312173
TOP 2.415526
TRY 36.481285
TTD 6.997408
TWD 33.959534
TZS 2542.275067
UAH 43.473053
UGX 3790.721648
USD 1.031349
UYU 45.479983
UZS 13313.413504
VES 54.605466
VND 26222.042512
VUV 122.443792
WST 2.849398
XAF 657.122199
XAG 0.034809
XAU 0.000391
XCD 2.787272
XDR 0.791003
XOF 657.112625
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.223987
ZAR 19.31147
ZMK 9283.38026
ZMW 28.729664
ZWL 332.093884
  • RBGPF

    59.3100

    59.31

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.0500

    11.61

    -0.43%

  • BCC

    1.5100

    118.74

    +1.27%

  • BCE

    0.5600

    23.82

    +2.35%

  • RELX

    0.0900

    45.43

    +0.2%

  • NGG

    -0.3900

    59.15

    -0.66%

  • CMSC

    0.1800

    23.43

    +0.77%

  • JRI

    0.2800

    12.42

    +2.25%

  • CMSD

    0.2400

    23.7

    +1.01%

  • RIO

    -0.1700

    58.6

    -0.29%

  • AZN

    0.3700

    66.25

    +0.56%

  • BTI

    0.4500

    36.99

    +1.22%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    8.47

    -0.47%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.28

    +0.27%

  • GSK

    -0.4800

    33.47

    -1.43%

  • BP

    0.5400

    30.47

    +1.77%

Right-wing YouTubers back South Korea president's last stand
Right-wing YouTubers back South Korea president's last stand / Photo: Jung Yeon-je - AFP

Right-wing YouTubers back South Korea president's last stand

Camped on the street winding up to the residence of South Korea's impeached president, protesters direct vitriol at police and echo obscure conspiracies as investigators prepare to execute a warrant for his arrest.

Text size:

Suspended leader Yoon Suk Yeol claimed "anti-state elements" and electoral fraud were plaguing the country as he made his bungled bid to instate martial law last month, before it was voted down and he was impeached.

South Korea's constitutional court will rule on whether to uphold his impeachment as Yoon also faces a growing probe -- and possible imprisonment or the death penalty -- for "insurrection".

But a small band of right-wing supporters spurred on by popular YouTubers have refused to leave his side as he attempts to fend off arrest.

"The president's martial law declaration was meant to take down the anti-state forces who are now bent on destroying this nation," one speaker declared Wednesday to a crowd holding up anti-impeachment placards.

Controversial pastor Jeon Gwang-hoon, a darling of South Korea's far right, earlier called on his supporters on YouTube to assemble to "resist the injustice" of the arrest warrant.

"The warrant is completely invalid, the people's right to resist stands above the Constitution," he said.

Shin Hae-shik, who runs a YouTube channel with 1.6 million followers, took centre stage at the hundreds-strong rally, calling on an "army of the people" to defend Yoon.

"The people have spoken," he declared, claiming that bigger numbers turning out in favour of the president's removal were "lies made up by the left".

A short police line is all that separates the angry crowd from Yoon's residence, and the supporters seem intent on defending him against arrest.

- 'To the dogs' -

Rife with nationalist sentiment and strident anti-communism, the ire of conspiracy theorists is often directed at liberal politicians -- accused of being in league with North Korea to undermine the South.

As night fell, the crowd waved glowsticks and American flags -- symbols of their anti-Pyongyang stance.

Im Hyeon-hwa, 67, stayed overnight in front of Yoon's residence, fearful that police might make their move in darkness before a January 6 deadline.

"It was cold and tiring, but we have to stand firm as we don't know what they'll do," she said.

The woman claimed police were taking marching orders from "communists" running the country's largest opposition party.

Yoon alluded to such claims in his martial law declaration -- specifically that South Korea's voting system may have been infiltrated by communist forces in a landslide parliamentary election win for the opposition in April.

Soldiers were not only sent to the country's National Assembly -- but also to the National Election Commission on the night of December 3.

Lee Jae-jin, a dentist from Busan city, said it was this theory which pushed him to travel across the country to join the rally.

"They impeached the president after he tried to reveal the truth behind election fraud," he said.

At one point a few of Yoon's diehard supporters broke through the cordon to block a police bus from parking near the entrance of his residence, seemingly anxious the officers may have been moving to detain him.

But the crowd was mostly made up of elderly locals who believed the anti-left rhetoric, and wanted to use their voices in support of the disgraced leader.

Hwang Seon-yeol, 77, said he would rather go to the grave than see Yoon removed. "If this happens, our country will go to the dogs," he said.

(K.Müller--BBZ)