
Yoon ruling prompts palace, museum closures over safety worries
Safety concerns have prompted major palaces, museums and tourist spots near the Constitutional Court in central Seoul to close Friday when a verdict will either oust or reinstate President Yoon Suk Yeol, impeached over his martial law declaration in December.
Four of the five Joseon-era (1392-1910) palaces — Gyeongbokgung, Changdeokgung, Changgyeonggung and Deoksugung — and state-run museums such as the National Palace Museum of Korea and National Folk Museum of Korea have announced closures, saying protests anticipated Friday could affect guest safety.
Changgyeonggung, the farthest of the four palaces from the court near Anguk Station in Jongno-gu, will close its nighttime tours only, though an official said daytime admission could be affected without prior notice.
The National Museum of Korean Contemporary History, the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea and the Seoul Museum of Craft Art will not be open either. Cheong Wa Dae, a former presidential office now open to the public after Yoon moved the presidential office to Yongsan, will also be closed.
Police will cordon off streets and roads adjacent to the Constitutional Court. The ruling will be broadcast live from the court at 11 a.m., with 20 randomly selected citizens in attendance.
Whether the palaces and museums will remain closed after Friday remains unclear. Officials from the institutions said they would update the public on further changes to admission in a separate notice.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Korea Herald
12 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Lee Jae-myung picks vice ministers for finance, foreign affairs, industry
President Lee Jae-myung on Tuesday filled six vice ministerial posts to pursue a speedy recovery from the economic crisis, ahead of his departure for Canada to attend the G7 summit next week. The nomination was aimed at safeguarding national interests by quickly deploying human resources amid economic recession in Asia's fourth-largest economy, the presidential office said. According to Lee's office, Lee named Lee Hyoung-il, commissioner of Statistics Korea, as the first vice finance minister. Lim Ki-keun, administrator of the Public Procurement Service, will serve as the second vice minister of the Ministry of Economy and Finance. Two vice-minister posts at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs were also filled. Park Yoon-joo, minister of the mission of South Korea to ASEAN, and Kim Jin-a, dean of the language and diplomacy division at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, will serve as the first and second vice ministers at the Foreign Ministry, respectively. Moon Shin-hak, spokesperson of the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy, was nominated as the first vice minister of trade, industry and energy. Yeo Han-koo was also reinstated as the minister of trade, a vice-ministerial position. He served in the same position from 2021 to 2022 under the former liberal Moon Jae-in administration. Vice ministers in South Korea do not require a confirmation hearing at the National Assembly before their appointment to the posts. "We promise to restore the administration that suffered a rupture after (former President Yoon Suk Yeol's) insurrection in a speedy manner," Lee's spokesperson Kang Yu-jung said. "We will create a government capable of overcoming the (aftermath of) global protectionism." Meanwhile, the presidential office announced that public access to Cheong Wa Dae will be partially restricted from July 16 to 31 and fully suspended starting August, as preparations for relocating the presidential office from Yongsan back to the historic compound in central Seoul begin. The move marks a reversal of former President Yoon Suk Yeol's 2022 decision to vacate the site. Public visits to Cheong Wa Dae will resume once President Lee's office completes the transition. The presidential office added that Seoul has secured a budget of 25.9 billion won ($18.9 million) for the relocation procedures.


Korea Herald
14 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Yoon, wife to face special counsel probes
577 prosecutors, investigators allotted to look into ex-first couple President Lee Jae-myung's Cabinet on Tuesday passed bills to open three special counsel investigations into former President Yoon Suk Yeol and his wife Kim Keon Hee. The bills are intended to "end the insurrection" that the Lee administration and the ruling Democratic Party of Korea accuse Yoon of instigating with his short-lived martial law decree on Dec. 3, 2024. At the second Cabinet meeting since Lee took office last week, the Democratic Party-led bills passed into law to bring together 577 prosecutors and investigators in total to investigate the former first couple. The combined size of the legal teams involved in the investigations is comparable to a district attorney's office. With Tuesday's passage, a special counsel investigation will look into if Yoon committed either insurrection or treason by trying to impose martial law. Yoon declared martial law late in the evening of Dec. 3, only to lift it six hours later following a National Assembly resolution that opposed it. The Democratic Party contends that Yoon attempted to provoke military action from North Korea with his hawkish policies to lay the groundwork for the declaration of martial law. Yoon's Ministry of National Defense playing anti-Kim Jong-un regime broadcasts along the inter-Korean borders from June 2024 was one example of the former administration deliberately seeking military confrontation with North Korea, according to the Democratic Party. Before their resumption last year, the border broadcasts had been used by the South Korean military as a psychological warfare tactic in the past, before they were halted in 2018 under then-President Moon Jae-in. The Democratic Party also claims that Yoon sent drones across the border into North Korea in October 2024, echoing Pyongyang's accusations that the South Korean military was behind the alleged drone infiltration. Yoon allegedly attempting to instigate an armed conflict with North Korea in the run-up to his martial law decree qualifies as "treason," the Democratic Party claimed, on top of being a "rebellion against the Constitution, which is to say, insurrection." Yoon's wife Kim is set to face a separate special counsel investigation that will scrutinize allegations she was involved in the then-ruling People Power Party's nomination of candidates for a National Assembly seat in the 2022 by-election. Another special counsel investigation would revisit the death of a Marine in July 2023. Cpl. Chae Su-geun, 20, died when he was swept away in moving water during a search and rescue operation to locate flood victims in a rain-swollen river in Yecheon, North Gyeongsang Province. The Democratic Party says Yoon's presidential office tried to impede the preliminary probe into Chae's death at the time to cover up possible wrongdoing at the top. Special counsels will be given as long as 170 days to investigate Yoon and his wife. Yoon was removed from office on April 4 in a unanimous ruling by the Constitutional Court over the martial law debacle, leading South Korea to hold an early presidential election on June 3.


Korea Herald
16 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Prosecution, CIO ramp up investigation into Yoon ahead of special counsel probe
The prosecution and the state anti-corruption agency are intensifying their investigations into former President Yoon Suk Yeol ahead of the launch of an independent special counsel probe. The ongoing inquiries center on allegations of insurrection, treason and obstruction of a military investigation. According to the prosecution's investigation team, led by Seoul High Prosecutors' Office chief prosecutor Park Se-hyun, the prosecutors have obtained key evidence, including phone server-related data from Yoon's secure phone lines and CCTV records from the Presidential Security Service on Monday. Since January, the investigation team has attempted to secure such records more than once through search warrants, but the PSS denied previous requests, citing the Criminal Procedure Act. The act bans any seizure and search attempts in a place where secret military matters are held, including the presidential residence, without the permission of the authority in charge. The PSS decided to cooperate with the prosecution, which on May 29 initiated another attempt to secure more evidence to substantiate charges against the former president. And the additional digital data stored on the server is reportedly taking time to access, as the PSS is making a voluntary submission while coordinating with the prosecution. The Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials, which is investigating Yoon's alleged interference in a military investigation into the death of Cpl. Chae Su-geun, also requested additional phone records from the presidential office on Monday. Chae is a marine conscript who drowned during a rescue mission in 2023. The Democratic Party of Korea claimed that Yoon tried to hinder an investigation into Lim Seong-geun, the then-commander of the deceased marine's division, and his possible negligence or other wrongdoings in Chae's death. The anti-corruption investigative agency previously secured data related to a specific phone number, which is suspected to be associated with Yoon's private office or workroom. The number was allegedly used to call then-Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup and the marine's case, scheduled for transfer to the police at the time, was suspended shortly thereafter. The CIO suspects Yoon instructed the former minister to delay the transfer of the case via phone. The CIO is reportedly receiving evidence necessary to identify the origin of the phone number. "The agency will transfer the necessary records once the special counsel probe is launched. But, until special prosecutors are appointed, we are committed to investigating the case thoroughly," the CIO official said in a press briefing on Tuesday. Though the National Assembly approved the special counsel probe bills on June 5, both the prosecutors and the state anti-corruption agency pushed ahead with their investigation to ensure there is no investigative gap in the probe. The prosecution, the CIO and the police are required to comply with the special prosecutors' request for investigative records, evidence or the transfer of cases currently under trial. The extent to which the special prosecutors will take over the martial law-related cases is expected to be decided after the special counsel probe is formally activated. Meanwhile, the police are likely to consider an arrest warrant request for Yoon as the former president continued to defy the summons. The police's special investigation unit announced Monday that a second summons was sent to Yoon. 'We requested that he appear for questioning on June 5, but Yoon's legal team rejected the summons. We asked him to comply with the second summons on Thursday,' the police officer said in a press conference held on Monday. Police typically request an arrest warrant if a suspect fails to respond to the third summons The police reportedly claimed that there is nothing more to share in regards to the possible arrest warrant since only the second summons has been issued. But it vowed to take the utmost efforts to conduct all possible investigations. While denying the former president's alleged criminal offenses, Yoon Kab-keun, one of Yoon's legal representatives, insisted Monday that the investigation can be carried out in a written questionnaire, suggesting Yoon is unlikely to comply with the summons.