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South Korea's Yoon attends court to fight detention extension

A pro-Yoon supporter (top left) shouts slogans over a loudhailer as police gather outside the Seoul Western District Court in Seoul on Jan 18, 2025, before the court weighs whether to extend the detention of impeached South Korea President Yoon Suk Yeol. (Photo: AFP/ANTHONY WALLACE)

18 Jan 2025 11:38AM (Updated: 18 Jan 2025 11:45PM)

SEOUL: Impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol attended court for the first time on Saturday (Jan 18) to fight a request by investigators to extend his detention as they probe his failed martial law bid.

Thousands of Yoon’s supporters rallied outside the court and scuffled with police as they chanted support for the suspended leader, who plunged South Korea into its worst political chaos in decades with his bid to suspend civilian rule.

The president’s Dec 3 martial law bid lasted just six hours, with lawmakers voting it down despite him ordering soldiers to storm parliament to stop them. He was subsequently impeached by parliament.

Yoon was detained in a dawn raid on Wednesday in a criminal probe on insurrection charges after he refused investigators’ summons and went to ground in his residence, using his presidential security detail to resist arrest.

South Korea’s first sitting president to be detained, Yoon also declined to cooperate during the initial 48 hours detectives were allowed to hold him.

The disgraced president remains in custody after investigators requested a new warrant on Friday to extend his detention.

Security officials run alongside vehicles in a motorcade believed to be transporting impeached South Korea President Yoon Suk Yeol to the Seoul Western District Court in Seoul on Jan 18, 2025, to attend a hearing which will decide whether to extend his detention as investigators probe his failed martial law bid. (Photo: AFP/ANTHONY WALLACE)

Yoon “explained and answered faithfully regarding the facts, evidence, and legal issues”, his lawyer Yoon Kab-keun told reporters after Saturday’s hearing. His lawyer earlier said Yoon decided to appear in court “with the intention of restoring his honour”.

The court must decide whether to free Yoon, which analysts say is unlikely, or extend his detention for around another 20 days. Its ruling is expected late on Saturday or early Sunday.

Crowds of Yoon’s backers gathered outside the court, waving flags and holding “release the president” placards. The Yonhap news agency said police estimated up to 44,000 supporters had rushed to the area.

A total of 40 protesters were arrested for physically assaulting police officers, attacking a member of the media, or attempting to enter the court building, among other offences, a district police official in Seoul told AFP.

The hearing concluded after about five hours at around 6.50pm (5.50pm, Singapore time), a court official told AFP.

Yoon left the court in a blue Justice Ministry van with his guards jogging alongside, AFP reporters saw, heading back to the Seoul Detention Center where he is being held.

Two vehicles carrying staff from the Corruption Investigation Office, which is probing Yoon, were attacked by protesters “resulting in a threatening situation for the CIO personnel”, it said in a statement.

The office will “request that the police (impose) strict punishment based on the evidence collected regarding these actions.”

“PASSIONATE PATRIOTISM”

Yoon sent a letter through his lawyers on Friday thanking his supporters, who include evangelical Christians and right-wing YouTubers, for protests that he deemed “passionate patriotism”.

During the hearing, some protesters outside chanted “Cha Eun-gyeong is a commie!”, referring to the judge reviewing the arrest request. Others cried “We love you, President Yoon Suk Yeol” and “Impeachment is invalid!”

They marched while waving South Korean and American flags and took over the main roads in front of the court. Yoon’s party typically favours South Korea’s US security alliance and rejects engagement with the nuclear-armed North.

“The likelihood of the court approving the arrest is very high and, aware of this, Yoon has urged maximum mobilisation among his hardline supporters,” Chae Jin-won of Humanitas College at Kyung Hee University told AFP.

“Today’s protests serve as a sort of farewell event between Yoon and his extreme support base.”

Supporters of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol are blocked by police officers as they try to go to the Seoul Western District Court in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, Jan 18, 2025. (Photo: AP/Lee Jin-man)
Supporters of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol are blocked by police officers as they try to go to the Seoul Western District Court in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, Jan 18, 2025. (Photo: AP/Lee Jin-man)
Seok Dong-hyeon, a lawyer for South Korea’s impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol, is surrounded by media members upon his arrival at a court in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, Jan 18, 2025. (Kim Hong-ji/Pool Photo via AP)

The crisis has seemingly boosted support for the conservative People Power Party (PPP), for whom Yoon won the presidential election in 2022.

A Gallup survey published on Friday showed the PPP’s approval rose to 39 per cent, three points higher than the opposition Democratic Party.

Although Yoon won the presidential election in 2022, the opposition Democratic Party has a majority in parliament after winning legislative polls last year.

The Democratic Party has celebrated the president’s arrest, with a top official calling it “the first step” to restoring constitutional and legal order.

MORE LEGAL WOES

A decision by the court to approve Yoon’s continued detention would give prosecutors time to formalise an indictment for insurrection, a charge for which he could be jailed for life or executed if found guilty.

Such an indictment would also mean Yoon would likely be detained for a maximum six months during the trial.

Once “the warrant is issued this time, (Yoon) will likely be unable to return home for an extended period,” political commentator Park Sang-byung told AFP.

Yoon said on Wednesday he had agreed to leave his compound to avoid “bloodshed”, but that he did not accept the legality of the investigation.

He has refused to answer investigators’ questions, with his legal team saying the president explained his position on the day he was arrested.

Yoon has also been absent from a parallel probe at the Constitutional Court, which is mulling whether to uphold his impeachment.

If that court rules against him, Yoon will formally lose the presidency and elections will be called within 60 days.

He did not attend the first two hearings this week, but the trial, which could last months, will continue in his absence.