International News

N. Korea hails electoral ‘death sentence’ on South’s president

SEOUL, (APP/AFP): North Korea on Thursday crowed over the recent shock electoral defeat of the South’s ruling party, calling it a political “death sentence” handed down on President Park Geun-Hye.
Last week’s ballot saw Park’s conservative Saenuri Party lose its
parliamentary majority for the first time in 16 years, as voters
registered their dissatisfaction with the her economic record and
soaring youth unemployment.
The result handed the country’s three centre-left opposition parties a combined 167 seats in the 300-seat legislature.
The crushing defeat left Park, who has less than two years left of her single, five-year term, a lame duck leader who will struggle to push through her reform agenda.
For North Korea, which has stepped up its personal attacks on Park
to extreme levels in recent months, it was a result to revel in.
“Through the elections, the South Korean people placed a death sentence on the confrontational policies of the Park Geun-Hye forces that drove North-South relations to catastrophe,” said a spokesman for the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea (CPRK).
The defeat left Park a “vegetable president” and one of the
political “living dead,” the spokesman said in a statement carried by the North’s official KCNA news agency.
If Park felt any genuine remorse or responsibility for the defeat, she should “apologise a hundred times” to the people of South and North Korea and step down from her post, the statement said.