South Korea’s president-elect said Sunday he will abandon the current mountainside presidential palace of Blue House and establish his office in central Seoul as part of efforts to better communicate with the public.
Relocating the presidential office was one of President-elect Yoon Suk Yeol's main campaign promises. The conservative former top prosecutor whose single five-year term begins on May 10 said the location and design of the Blue House have fed criticisms that South Korean presidents are cut off from the public and wield excessive power.
At the Blue House, offices for presidential advisers and other officials, as well as the press room, are not in the same building where the president works.
At a televised news conference Sunday, Yoon said he will move the presidential office to the Defense Ministry compound in central Seoul and that he’ll begin his term there. He said Defense Ministry officials would be moved to the Joint Chiefs of Staff building at the compound and that JCS staff would be moved in phases to a war command center near Seoul.
Yoon said a massive public park will be established near the new presidential office and that ordinary citizens will be able to look at his office from there at a close distance. He said he plans to establish a press center at the new presidential office and meet journalists there frequently.
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