World

South Korea's ousted leader Yoon due in court as criminal trial begins

Yoon is due to attend the first hearing of his criminal trial to face charges that he led an insurrection when he declared martial law late last year

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 14 Apr 2025 8:47AM

South Korea's ousted leader Yoon due in court as criminal trial begins
The charge of insurrection faced by the impeached leader is punishable by life imprisonment or even death, although South Korea has not executed anyone in decades – April 14, 2025

IMPEACHED South Korean leader Yoon Suk Yeol is due to attend the first hearing on Monday of his criminal trial to face charges that he led an insurrection when he declared martial law late last year and plunged the country into months of turmoil.

Reuters reported today, Yoon's declaration that martial law was needed in part to root out "anti-state" elements was lifted six hours later after parliamentary staffers used barricades and fire extinguishers to ward off special operations soldiers trying to enter parliament, where lawmakers voted to reject martial law.

Yoon, who has denied all charges against him, is due to attend the trial at the Seoul Central District Court on Monday at 10 a.m. (0100 GMT) as required by law for a defendant in a criminal trial.

The charge of insurrection faced by the impeached leader is punishable by life imprisonment or even death, although South Korea has not executed anyone in decades.

Yoon was removed by the Constitutional Court from office earlier this month for violating constitutional powers with actions that were labelled "a serious challenge to democracy".

His martial law declaration on December 3 shocked South Koreans, and created chaos in all areas of society, the economy and foreign policy, the Constitutional Court said.

The upheaval has further exposed deep social rifts between conservatives and liberals and stepped up pressure on institutions and the military, which had found itself in a quandary over whether to enforce martial law.

The former president returned to his private home on Friday from the official residence, with crowds of conservative supporters turning out to greet his motorcade.

He remains defiant and has pledged to "stand by" his supporters.

The country will now hold a snap election on June 3. Questions remain over whether Yoon might still play a role.

For the criminal hearing on Monday, two senior military officers are expected to take the witness stand.

One of them, Cho Sung-hyun from the army's capital defence command, already testified at the Constitutional Court in February that he was ordered to send troops to "drag" lawmakers out of parliament during Yoon's martial order rollout. – April 14, 2025

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