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PoliticsSouth Korea

South Korea investigators want Yoon formally charged

January 23, 2025

The anti-corruption agency leading a criminal investigation into the impeached president recommended he be indicted over insurrection charges. Yoon is still reeling from the aftermath of his short lived martial law bid.

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A 24-hour Yonhap news TV broadcast at Seoul Railway Station shows news broadcast with impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Jan 21, 2025
Investigators recommend that the impeached president be charged with insurrectionImage: Kim Jae-Hwan/ZUMAPRESS/IMAGO

The South Korean agency leading the criminal investigation into impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol has recommended that he be charged with insurrection and abuse of power.

Investigators handed the results of their 51-day probe into the December 3 attempt to declare martial law to prosecutors on Thursday.

Yoon was arrested last week in a dramatic standoff with security over his martial law bid, becoming South Korea's first sitting president to be detained.

What do we know about the investigator's recommendation?

The Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials (CIO) said it "decided to request the Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office file charges against the sitting President, Yoon Suk Yeol, in connection with allegations including leading insurrection."

It said the impeached president had "conspired with the former Minister of National Defense and military commanders on December 3, 2024."

The leader, currently suspended from duties, "declared martial law with the intent to exclude state authority or disrupt the constitutional order, thereby inciting riots."

How South Korean president's arrest could cause more turmoil

The CIO was set up in 2021 as an independent anti-graft body to probe high-ranking officials, including the president and their family members.

Its team involves police and the Defense Ministry. However, the agency lacks the authority to prosecute the president and can only issue recommendations to that effect.

Prosecutors have 11 days to decide whether to charge Yoon, who would then face a criminal trial.

Since his arrest, the impeached president has refused questioning by the CIO. His lawyers have repeatedly stated that the CIO is not authorized to probe insurrection.

Yoon and his lawyers have argued that his martial law bid was a necessary measure due to election fraud after the opposition won parliamentary elections in a landslide last year.

In parallel to Yoon's criminal investigation, he is also facing an impeachment trial at the Constitutional Court. The court's decision will determine whether Yoon will be permanently removed or reinstated as president.

Yoon's martial law bid and its aftermath

Yoon's brief attempt to impose martial law in December has spiraled into a major political and constitutional crisis in the country.

If he is charged and found guilty of masterminding an insurrection, he could face life in prison or even the death penalty.

Prior to his detention, he evaded arrest for weeks by remaining in his residential compound, protected by members of the Presidential Security Service (PSS).

Yoon insists the investigation was illegal and the arrest warrant used to detain him was invalid.

Several opinion polls indicate that a majority of South Koreans support his impeachment, but his staunch followers oppose it.

rmt/lo (AFP, Reuters)