South Korea’s former president Yoon attends hearing on detention warrant
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Mr Yoon Suk Yeol was ousted from office by the Constitutional Court which upheld his impeachment by parliament for his martial law bid.
PHOTO: REUTERS
SEOUL – South Korea’s former president Yoon Suk Yeol appeared on July 9 at a Seoul court, which is considering a special prosecutor’s request to detain him as part of a probe into his botched bid to impose martial law.
The Seoul Central District Court began hearing arguments from a special counsel team investigating his martial law decree in December, and from his legal team on the request to detain him over allegations of abuse of power and obstruction of justice.
After the hearing, he will await the court’s decision at the Seoul Detention Centre, about 20km south of the capital, the special prosecutor said.
Yoon, who was wearing a dark navy suit and a red tie, did not answer questions from reporters as he entered the court building.
About 100 supporters gathered near the court, holding flags and signs, chanting “President Yoon” and “Yoon Again” in the stifling heat of about 35 deg C.
Scores of police officers and dozens of buses formed a tight security cordon in front of Yoon’s house as well as around the court. It is expected to announce a decision late on July 9 or in the early hours of July 10.
Yoon was ousted in April by the Constitutional Court, which upheld his impeachment by parliament for his martial law bid that shocked South Koreans and triggered months of political turmoil, entrenching already deep divisions in the country.
The former conservative president is already under a criminal trial on charges that his attempt to rule the country using martial law amounted to an insurrection, a charge that is punishable by a life sentence or even death.
The probe has picked up pace
He was previously taken into custody over the earlier criminal probe and was released from jail after 52 days
The detention warrant request was made on the grounds of Yoon posing a flight risk and concerns that he might interfere with witnesses linked to his case, local media reported, citing the special prosecutors’ request.
If Yoon is detained, he is expected to be held at the Seoul Detention Centre. The special prosecution is expected to speed up a probe into additional allegations, including whether he hurt South Korea’s interests by intentionally inflaming tensions with North Korea.
Yoon’s lawyers have rejected all the allegations against him, saying the detention warrant request is unreasonable and the investigation lacks objective evidence. REUTERS


