Park Geun-hye certain to win S. Korean presidency: local media - Xinhua | English.news.cn
Park Geun Hye won the election by a margin of 4%, the most authoritarian president in 20 years. She is the only party boss who still gets a 90 degree bow from her party's parliament members when she walks around, when not even the current president gets it and is considered to be the most authoritarian president since the last military dictator president left office in 1992.
The elderly voters broke the tie in favor of Park, whose father was a lieutenant of the Imperial Japanese Army battling the Chinese in Manchuria for her anti-China/NK stances. This is a big blow for Kim Jong Eun, who was counting on a big flow of aid from the ROK if the pro-North leftwingers won the election, and tested the ICBM to sway the ROK presidential election at the cost of $900 million, but he learned the hard way that what North Korea does no longer matters in the ROK politics.
This is also a big blow to China, as Park's election screws Chinese plan of forming a united front with Korea against Japan on territorial disputes, and Japan can now focus all its attention on the Diaoyudai instead.
Park Geun-hye certain to win S. Korean presidency: local media
English.news.cn 2012-12-19 20:28:15
(Xinhua/Park Jin-hee)
SEOUL, Dec. 19 (Xinhua) -- Park Geun-hye of South Korea's ruling Saenuri Party is poised to win the tightly contested presidential election Wednesday and become the first female leader of the country, local media reported.
Park, the 60-year-old daughter of South Korean dictator Park Chung-hee, is sure to beat her liberal rival, Moon Jae-in of the main opposition Democratic United Party, according to broadcasters KBS and SBS.
With a little less than 36.1 percent of the votes counted as of 9:11 p.m. local time, Park won 52.8 percent of the votes, compared to Moon with 46.9 percent.
Voter turnout was estimated at 75.8 percent, the highest in a decade.
Park Geun Hye won the election by a margin of 4%, the most authoritarian president in 20 years. She is the only party boss who still gets a 90 degree bow from her party's parliament members when she walks around, when not even the current president gets it and is considered to be the most authoritarian president since the last military dictator president left office in 1992.
The elderly voters broke the tie in favor of Park, whose father was a lieutenant of the Imperial Japanese Army battling the Chinese in Manchuria for her anti-China/NK stances. This is a big blow for Kim Jong Eun, who was counting on a big flow of aid from the ROK if the pro-North leftwingers won the election, and tested the ICBM to sway the ROK presidential election at the cost of $900 million, but he learned the hard way that what North Korea does no longer matters in the ROK politics.
This is also a big blow to China, as Park's election screws Chinese plan of forming a united front with Korea against Japan on territorial disputes, and Japan can now focus all its attention on the Diaoyudai instead.