Security personnel of South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol block the road with vehicles in the grounds of the presidential residence in Seoul, January 3, 2025. YONHAP / AFP Investigators leading investigations in South Korea into the statement of martial law by the conservative president, Yoon Suk Yeol, suffered a new snub. Despite a formal arrest warrant, prosecutors from the Senior Corruption Investigation Office (CIO) had to give up on arresting Mr. Yoon in the early morning of Friday, January 3, a month to the day , after his unsuccessful attempt to impose martial law. The presidential security services prohibited them from entering the residence. After a face-to-face meeting of almost five hours, the IOC withdrew. “It was impossible to execute the arrest warrant in the context of the ongoing confrontation,” explained the prosecutors, who were also “concerned about the safety of the staff” and who “regret the attitude of the suspect who did not responded to legal procedure. The blockage sparked a reaction from the ruling People’s Power Party (PPP), whose vice-president, Kwon Young-se, described the IOC’s intervention as “very bad”. Mr. Kwon recalled that the president “is not going to run away” and that “there is no longer any risk of destruction of evidence, because the investigation has already progressed well.” Kwon Seong-dong, chairman of the PPP parliamentary group, urged investigators to refrain from “any unreasonable attempt to arrest the sitting president” due to the “risk of confrontation.” You have 76.03% of this article left to read. The rest is reserved for subscribers.
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In South Korea, the presidential guard prevents the arrest of President Yoon Suk Yeol
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