For the seventh straight week, protesters gathered en masse in the streets of the capital, but the mood was generally festive, after lawmakers yesterday voted overwhelmingly to impeach the deeply unpopular Park over a corruption scandal.
Although the move stripped Park of her substantial executive powers, activists said they intended to keep up the pressure, with the impeachment still requiring final approval from the Constitutional Court -- a process that could take months.
"We are still hungry" the crowd in Seoul's Gwanghwamun chanted, as they also sang along to the revised lyrics of a Christmas song that read: "Only after she is out, will it be a Merry Christmas."
Organisers put the turnout at around 200,000 -- smaller than previous weeks when the crowd's passed the million mark.
Until the court rules, Park's authority is only suspended and she retains the title of president and the immunity from prosecution that goes with it.
And she still has her supporters, many of them elderly voters who remain steadfast admirers of her father, the late military dictator Park Chung-Hee -- credited as the architect of the South's economic transformation but vilified as an authoritarian rights abuser.
Waving national flags, they carried banners that read: "President Park, Don't Cry" and "Nullify impeachment".
Park was impeached on numerous counts of constitutional and criminal violations ranging from a failure to protect people's lives to bribery and abuse of power.
Most of the charges stemmed from an investigation into a scandal involving the president's long-time friend, Choi Soon-Sil, who is currently awaiting trial for fraud and embezzlement.
Prosecutors named Park a suspect in the case, saying she colluded in Choi's efforts to strong arm donations from large companies worth tens of millions of dollars.
The National Assembly has played its part, but the country now faces a lengthy period of uncertainty at a time of slowing economic growth and elevated military tensions with nuclear-armed North Korea.
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