Arrest of South Korea’s Yoon: What is expected for the President in the coming days
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The authorities have 48 hours to question Mr Yoon Suk Yeol, after which they must seek a warrant to detain him for up to 20 days or release him.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
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SEOUL - South Korea's impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol was arrested
While he is the first incumbent president to be arrested in South Korea, other high-profile figures including former president Park Geun-hye and Samsung Electronics chairman Jay Y. Lee have also spent time in the Seoul Detention Centre.
The following is what is expected to unfold for the former prosecutor-turned-president in coming days.
Sofa in questioning area
Mr Yoon has been taken to the offices of the Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials (CIO) that is leading the investigation into his role in declaring martial law on Dec 3.
The CIO is an independent agency launched in 2021 to investigate high-ranking officials including the president and their family members, but it does not have authority to prosecute the president and must refer any case to the prosecutors' office for further action.
The office is located in a sprawling government complex in Gwacheon, which borders the capital Seoul, about 10 minutes by police motorcade from the president's official residence.
The CIO prepared a questionnaire of over 200 pages for Mr Yoon. Although the authorities had prepared for the questioning to be video recorded, it is not being filmed as Mr Yoon refused to be recorded, a CIO official said.
The interrogation facilities include a newly created rest area with a sofa to accommodate Mr Yoon, Yonhap News Agency reported.
Solitary jail cell
The authorities have 48 hours to question Mr Yoon, after which they must seek a warrant to detain him for up to 20 days or release him.
While in custody, Mr Yoon is expected to be held in the Seoul Detention Centre, although Yonhap said there may not be time for him to go there within 48 hours if questioning runs long.
The facility, despite its name, is in the city of Uiwang, 22km south of Seoul.
According to precedent and due to his status, Mr Yoon will probably be assigned a solitary cell, likely bigger and better appointed than the standard 6.56 sq m single cells.
On arrival at the detention centre, Mr Yoon will go through the formality of an ID check and a simple health examination, and join the life of a pre-trial detainee rising at 6.30am and with lights out at 9pm.
Investigators from the police use a ladder to get over a bus to make their way to the entrance of impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol’s official residence on Jan 15.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
2,500 calories
The Korea Correctional Service, which operates the country's prisons and detention centres, says in its regulations and menu section that it provides inmates with 2,500 calories of food a day at a cost of about 1,600 won (S$1.50) per meal.
The menus at the Seoul Detention Centre on Jan 15 included a dinner of bean sprout soup, barbecued beef, kimchi, pepper and wrap sauce, according to information provided by the centre.
An official at the centre declined to comment when asked whether it expected to be housing Mr Yoon.
Mr Yoon Suk Yeol arriving at the complex building housing the Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials (CIO) in Gwacheon on Jan 15.
PHOTO: AFP
20 days
The authorities have a maximum of 20 days to indict Mr Yoon from the moment of his arrest.
They have 48 hours to request a formal detention warrant from the court, which would consider the likelihood of whether he could try to tamper with evidence or witnesses.
The CIO, which will question him in that period, is made up of prosecutors under its head, Mr Oh Dong-woon, who used to be a judge.
Two of the four investigative divisions currently have no staff, and just nine prosecutors and Mr Oh's deputy are handling Mr Yoon's case, which has magnified questions over whether the agency has the capacity to successfully build a case against Mr Yoon. REUTERS

