NewsSouth Korea Deployed 3,000 Cops in Dramatic Arrest of President Yoon

South Korea Deployed 3,000 Cops in Dramatic Arrest of President Yoon

South Korea reportedly deployed 3,000 police officers to arrest President Yoon Suk Yeol on Wednesday after his recent impeachment.

Yoon is the first incumbent South Korean president to be arrested, and he is being investigated by the Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials (CIO) over his short-lived declaration of martial law in early December.

Newsweek reached out to the South Korean embassy in the U.K. for comment via email.

SEOUL (@CNN) — 7:26AM — Police & corruption investigators are making a **2nd ARREST attempt** of South Korea’s suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol.

Hundreds of Yoon supporters are in front of his residence before sunrise, as investigators are now attempting to make the arrest. pic.twitter.com/rYYG0xME0u

— Mike Valerio (@ValerioCNN) January 14, 2025
Why It Matters

The nature of Yoon’s arrest by South Korean investigators is significant because the presence of that many police officers shows just how serious the political turmoil in the country is, even after the president’s impeachment.

Moreover, the lengths to which the police officers went to arrest him indicate that no one is above the law in South Korea, including those in high-ranking positions of power.

What to Know

The president was arrested and he was taken to the investigator’s office. Seoul’s police now have 48 hours to question Yoon after which they must obtain a warrant to detain him for up to 20 days or release him.

In order to get the president into custody, Seoul investigators scaled barricades and cut through barbed wire to reach his residence, as reported by BBC News. In addition to the police who cut barbed wire and overcame barricades, 1,000 officers scaled walls and hiked up nearby trails to reach his residence. Both Yoon’s supporters and protesters were gathered outside of his residence when the arrest occurred.

Yoon, 64, was reportedly questioned for two and a half hours by CIO investigators at their headquarters in Gwacheon, just south of Seoul, after his arrest in the morning, according to South Korean news outlet Yonhap News Agency. The president’s arrest came after CIO investigators tried to arrest him on January 3, but were unable to due to a six-hour standoff with his security detail.

Yoon previously said that he would “fight to the end” prior to his arrest.

South Korean Police Officers Outside Presidential Residence
South Korean police outside the presidential residence in Seoul, South Korea, on January 3, 2025. Some 3,000 police officers were later sent to Yoon’s residence and arrested him.

Lee Jin-man/Associated Press

The president is facing charges of insurrection and abuse of power after his impeachment, following his declaration of martial law on December 3, which caused the country to enter into a sociopolitical crisis. He said he was attempting to thwart “anti-state” activities by the opposition parties in the National Assembly, as they were preparing to vote.

South Korea’s National Assembly impeached Yoon on December 14, and the country’s Constitutional Court is deciding whether to uphold the impeachment and remove him from office or to dismiss the charges and restore his authority.

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