The usually quiet streets outside South Korea’s constitutional court in Seoul are now a political ground zero for a decision that will determine the country’s future. Months after Yoon Suk Yeol imposed martial law and triggered South Korea’s worst political crisis in decades, the court will on Friday decide whether to uphold the suspended president’s impeachment or return him to office. The name of the neighbourhood in which the court lies is Anguk, which means “peaceful country”, an irony that will not be lost on South Koreans as they await the court ruling on the vote by MPs to impeach