SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - Images from the election of South Korea’s new president, liberal Lee Jae-myung, are everything you'd expect to see in one of the world's most vibrant democracies.
South Korea has endured 6 months of political turmoil. What can we expect in Lee’s presidency?
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - Images from the election of South Korea’s new president, liberal Lee Jae-myung, are everything you'd expect to see in one of the world's most vibrant democracies.
Peaceful. Orderly. And, because this is South Korea, compulsively eye-catching, with crowds singing raucously along to blaring K-pop, dancers bouncing in closely choreographed sequences, and color-coordinated outfits for the two front-runners and their supporters - blue for Lee, who was inaugurated Wednesday for a single, five-year term, red for the distant runner-up, conservative Kim Moon Soo.
What the pictures don't capture is the absolute turmoil of the past six months, making Tuesday one of the strangest - and, possibly, most momentous — election days since the country emerged in the late 1980s from decades of dictatorship.
Since Dec. 3, South Koreans have watched, stunned, as an extraordinary sequence of events unfolded: Then-South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol declared martial law, a first since the dictatorship. In response, lawmakers, leaping fences and jostling with heavily armed soldiers, elbowed their way into a besieged parliament to vote the declaration down. Yoon was then impeached and removed from office and now, just two months after his fall, another president has taken office.