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Tens Of Thousands Of South Koreans Protest To Demand President's Resignation

President Park Geun-hye is accused of a growing influence-peddling scandal.
Demonstrators shout slogans during a protest calling for the resignation of South Korean President Park Geun-Hye in central Seoul on November 5, 2016.Thousands of South Koreans took to the streets November 5 to demand embattled President Park Geun-Hye resign over a crippling corruption scandal. / AFP / Ed JONES (Photo credit should read ED JONES/AFP/Getty Images)
ED JONES via Getty Images
Demonstrators shout slogans during a protest calling for the resignation of South Korean President Park Geun-Hye in central Seoul on November 5, 2016.Thousands of South Koreans took to the streets November 5 to demand embattled President Park Geun-Hye resign over a crippling corruption scandal. / AFP / Ed JONES (Photo credit should read ED JONES/AFP/Getty Images)
ED JONES via Getty Images

SEOUL (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of South Koreans protested in central Seoul on Saturday in one the largest demonstrations in the country’s capital for years, calling on embattled President Park Geun-hye to resign over a growing influence-peddling scandal.

Roughly 43,000 people were at the candle-lit rally early on Saturday evening, according to police. Organizers said a growing crowd of 100,000 had assembled, making the protest one of the biggest since demonstrations in 2008 against U.S. beef imports.

Chung Sung-Jun via Getty Images

Park Geun-hye has been rocked by a scandal involving an old friend who is alleged to have used her closeness to the president to meddle in state affairs. Park has pledged to cooperate with prosecutors in an investigation.

Koreans have been angered by the revelations and say Park, the latest South Korean leader to be embroiled in a scandal involving family or friends, has betrayed public trust and mismanaged her government.

Her approval rating has slipped to just 5 percent according to a Gallup poll released on Friday, the lowest number for a South Korean president since such polling began in 1988.

Chung Sung-Jun via Getty Images

Police said they had deployed 17,600 officers and 220 units including buses and mobile barriers to Saturday’s protest.

Police in riot gear lined the alleys and streets leading to the presidential Blue House as the main body of the demonstration began the march through central Seoul.

Park has sacked many of her immediate advisers over the crisis. A former aide, Jeong Ho-seong, was arrested on Thursday on suspicion of leaking classified information, a prosecution official told Reuters.

ED JONES via Getty Images

No South Korean president has ever failed to finish their five-year term, but Park has faced growing pressure from the public and political opponents to quit.

“Even though we’re just students, we feel like we can’t put up with this unreasonable society anymore so we’re participating in this protest with like-minded friends,” said Byun Woo-hyuk, an 18-year-old high school student holding a banner calling on the president to resign.

(Additional reporting by Nataly Pak and Yoo Han-bin; Editing by Alex Richardson)

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