Home Foreign News South Korea: Investigators fail to detain impeached president Yoon Suk Yeol |...

South Korea: Investigators fail to detain impeached president Yoon Suk Yeol | World News

Call us


South Korean investigators have failed to detain impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol after a nearly six-hour standoff with his security service.

It is the latest confrontation of a political crisis that has paralysed South Korean politics and seen two heads of state impeached in under a month.

The country’s anti-corruption agency said it withdrew its investigators after they were blocked from entering Mr Yoon’s official residence due to concerns about the safety of its members.

The agency expressed “serious regret about the attitude of the suspect, who did not respond to a process by law”.

Mr Yoon, a former prosecutor, has defied investigators’ attempts to question him for weeks.

Supporters of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol stage a rally to oppose a court having issued a warrant to detain Yoon, as police offices stand guard near the presidential residence in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, Jan. 3, 2025. The letters read "Oppose Impeachment." (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)
Image:
Pic: AP

Read more on South Korea:
The South Koreans who stood up to martial law
Who is the president who declared martial law?

The last time he is known to have left the residence was on 12 December.

Investigators from the country’s anti-corruption agency are weighing charges of rebellion after Mr Yoon, apparently frustrated that his policies were blocked by an opposition-dominated parliament, declared martial law on 3 December and dispatched troops to surround the National Assembly.

Many police vans are lined up in front of South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol's official residence in Seoul on January 3, 2025.( The Yomiuri Shimbun via AP Images )
Image:
Police vans lined up in front of Yoon’s Seoul residence. Pic: AP

Parliament overturned the declaration within hours in an unanimous vote and impeached Mr Yoon, accusing him of rebellion, while South Korean anti-corruption authorities and public prosecutors opened separate investigations into the events.

A Seoul court issued a warrant for Mr Yoon’s detention on Tuesday, but enforcing it is complicated as long as he remains in his official residence.

Nearly five hours after dozens of investigators and police officers were seen entering the gate of the residence in Seoul to execute the warrant, the dramatic scene appeared to have developed into a standoff.

Analysis: President Yoon standing firm against the law

It appears President Yoon is ready to keep defying anti-corruption officials.

The warrant for his arrest expires on Monday, so those determined to see him detained will have to think fast.

Yoon’s legal team insists the move is “illegal and invalid”.

They’re basing their case on a law which prevents locations potentially linked to military secrets from being searched without the consent of the person in charge – in this case Yoon.

There was speculation Yoon might try to hide in a bunker in his residence.

But whatever happens next, whatever cover he continues to find, Yoon’s political career is all but over.

And the longer the stand-off, the more damaging it is for South Korea’s democratic reputation.

The ultra conservative’s two-and-a-half years in office have been marked by scandal.

His attempt to defy arrest is a damning denouement.

If he is eventually detained, Yoon, who was impeached by parliament last month, would become the first sitting president to be arrested.

The country’s constitutional court will ultimately decide whether to uphold the impeachment vote.

That move would trigger an election for a new president.

Seok Dong-hyeon, one of several lawyers on Yoon’s legal team, confirmed the investigators arrived at the building and said the agency’s efforts to detain Yoon were “reckless” and showed an “outrageous discard for law.”

South Korea’s Defence Ministry confirmed the investigators and police officers got past a military unit guarding the residence’s grounds before arriving at the building.

The presidential security service, which controls the residence itself, refused to comment on whether its members were confronting investigators.

The liberal opposition Democratic Party called on the country’s acting leader, Deputy Prime Minister Choi Sang-mok, to order the presidential security service to stand down.

Mr Yoon’s defence minister, police chief and several top military commanders have already been arrested over their roles in the period of martial law.



Source link