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More than a quarter of the legitimate South Korean voters have already handed over their ballot papers for who should be the nearest president of the country.
South Korea will break a record in the early vote when more than 12 million voters hand over their ballot papers in front of the country’s upcoming presidential elections.
According to Yonhap news agency in South Korea, the number for early votes – until noon on Friday – corresponds to more than a quarter of the 44.3 million elected voters in South Korea.
The early vote began on Thursday and ended on Friday before the official vote on Tuesday, at the South Korean who will replace the accused President Yoon Sook-Yeol.
Yoon triggered a political storm in South Korea in December when he briefly imposed war law before the controversial move was lifted by the National Assembly.
The ex-president claimed to declare his decision to declare war law and to organize the detention of opposition politicians, to infiltration the government was due to the infiltration of the government by anti-state and North Korean forces.
Yoon was charged in the same month, but was only removed from office in April when the Constitutional Court was signed in South Korea at the elimination.
In the last survey before the election, Lee Jae-Myung supported the Democratic Party as the leader with 42.9 percent, followed by Kim Moon-Soo from Yoons Conservative People Power with 36.8 percent.
The candidates were followed by the conservative new reform party candidate Lee Jun-Seok in a distant third place, which only held 10.3 percent of the support.
It is expected that the coordination in South Korea will bring an end to the political turbulence to the months of turbulence, where a polarized public has mobilized for both and against the defendant Yoon.
The South Korean police reported an increase in the vandalism of campaign materials and said that this week they had arrested at least 690 people because of related incidents.
The front runner Lee told the media that he had worn a bulletproof vest and built in his life in his life on campaigns.
The police also said that this week they had counted eleven cases of social media posts that threatened Lee, and threatened to kill the candidate of the new reform party.