Embattled S. Korean ex-defence minister defends military’s actions during martial law

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Former South Korean defence minister Kim Yong-hyun justified President Yoon Suk Yeol’s Dec 3 martial law declaration.

Former South Korean defence minister Kim Yong-hyun justified President Yoon Suk Yeol’s Dec 3 martial law declaration.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

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- Former defence minister Kim Yong-hyun, currently being investigated in detention for insurrection and abuse of power charges, justified

President Yoon Suk Yeol’s Dec 3 martial law declaration

and defended the military actions under his orders.

“The martial law was to eradicate the anti-state forces and to bequeath the free Korea to the future generation... We all know that the president declared the martial law upon my suggestion,” he said in a statement released behind bars at the Eastern Detention Centre of Seoul.

“Since I gave the orders under the president’s declaration of martial law, the commanders and soldiers are at no fault of their own. It is a justified and respectable fulfillment of their duties as members of the military.”

Several military commanders are under investigation for the part they played in the military actions during the six-hour martial law on Dec 3 and Dec 4. This included the recent arrests of Kim himself, Martial Law Commander Park An-su, the army’s Counterintelligence Commander Yeo In-hyeong, Capital Defence Command chief Lee Jin-woo and former defence intelligence commander Roh Sang-won.

Mr Kim said the prosecution’s ongoing investigation is “insulting to the military,” claiming that they have not presented evidence or legal reasoning on why the martial law should be considered an act of insurrection.

The testimonies of high-ranking military commanders and government officials have shown that the military was

ordered to arrest over a dozen prominent figures

in the Parliament and government, along with the president’s most outspoken critics in the civilian sector.

Troops were dispatched to the National Assembly and the National Election Commission (NEC), with the former defence chief saying that the deployment to the latter was to investigate the possibility of past elections being rigged.

The National Intelligence Service (NIS) recently reported to Parliament that its 2023 security inspection of the NEC did not reveal any indications of the supposed election rigging, in contrast to Mr Yoon’s claim via a public address on Dec 12 that the NEC had supposedly refused the NIS inspection. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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