South Korea prosecutors seek 10-year sentence for ousted President Yoon
An independent counsel on Friday demanded a 10-year prison term for South Korea’s ousted President Yoon in the first of seven criminal cases related to his ill-fated attempt to impose martial law in 2024 and other allegations that flared when he was in office. The first of Yoon’s trials to wrap up covers charges including his defiance of authorities’ attempts to investigate and detain him. Yoon denies all charges and his lawyers have argued that the detainment warrant was invalid and illegal. The court is expected to render a verdict as early as next month.
Yoon faces other trials on accusations ranging from corruption and favour trading to rebellion, a grave charge that is punishable by life imprisonment or execution. The rebellion trial is also nearing an end. Yoon’s martial law enactment brought armed troops into Seoul streets and triggered South Korea’s most serious political crisis in decades. Martial law lasted only a few hours, as lawmakers managed to enter the National Assembly and voted to lift his decree. Yoon was impeached by the opposition-controlled parliament later in December 2024 before he was formally dismissed as president upon an Constitutional Court ruling in April.
On Friday, independent counsel Cho Eun-suk’s team requested the Seoul Central District Court to sentence Yoon to 10 years in prison on charges of obstruction of official duties, abuse of power, falsification of official documents and destruction of evidence. Yoon holed up at his residence and hindered authorities’ attempts to execute a warrant for his detention for weeks after his impeachment. The standoff caused worries about physical clashes between Yoon’s presidential security service and those attempting to detain him and further deepened a national divide.










