
Yonhap: S.Korea special prosecutor seeks arrest warrant for ex-President Yoon
SEOUL, June 24 — South Korea's special prosecutor asked a court today to issue an arrest warrant for former President Yoon Suk Yeol, marking an intensifying investigation of the ousted leader over his botched bid to impose martial law, Yonhap News Agency said.
Yoon, who is already facing a criminal trial on insurrection charges for leading the martial law declaration, was arrested in January after resisting authorities trying to take him into custody but was released after 52 days on technical grounds.
The martial law attempt shocked a country that had prided itself on being a thriving democracy after overcoming military dictatorship in the 1980s and triggered a snap presidential election to pick Yoon's successor amid bitter political infighting.
The new warrant is on a charge of obstruction, Yonhap said. Yoon had been under investigation by the police and the state prosecutors' office on a number of charges stemming from the failed attempt in December to impose military rule.
The special prosecutor's office could not be immediately reached for comment.
A lawyer who has represented Yoon during his impeachment and criminal trials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In January, Yoon initially resisted an attempt by investigators trying to execute a court warrant for his arrest, holed up in the presidential residence while his security service led by officials loyal to him barricaded the gates.
The special prosecutor was appointed just days after liberal President Lee Jae-myung took office on June 4 after winning the snap election called after Yoon's ouster in April and has launched a team of more than 200 prosecutors and investigators to take over ongoing investigations against Yoon.
Yoon is fighting the charges against him that include masterminding insurrection, which is punishable by death or life in prison, claiming he had declared martial law on December 3 to sound the alarm over the threat to democracy posed by then-opposition Democratic Party. — Reuters
Hashtags

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


Free Malaysia Today
40 minutes ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Ramasamy ends defamation suit against consumer activist
Former Penang deputy chief minister P Ramasamy had sued consumer activist K Koris Atan over an article which the latter had said was published based on a 'personal conversation' with a reporter. GEORGE TOWN : Former Penang deputy chief minister P Ramasamy has reached a settlement in his defamation suit against consumer activist K Koris Atan. Ramasamy had sued Koris over comments in an article published by news portal The Vibes last year, which the activist had said was based on a 'personal conversation' with a reporter. The suit was over claims that Ramasamy, as chairman of the Penang Hindu Endowments Board at the time, had failed to improve access to the hilltop Murugan temple here, such as by introducing a cable car or elevator. The sessions court dismissed the suit in December and ordered Ramasamy to pay Koris RM10,000 in costs, which Ramasamy then appealed. In a consent order recorded via Zoom before Justice Kenneth St James, Ramasamy agreed to withdraw the appeal and said that accepted Koris' assertion that he did not make the remarks published in the article. As part of the settlement, Ramasamy agreed to discontinue the appeal against Koris with no liberty to file afresh. The Vibes and its journalist Ian McIntyre, who were also named in the original suit, had previously settled with Ramasamy, issued an apology, and removed the article. The consent order was signed by Shamsher Singh Thind for Ramasamy and P Thannarasu for Koris.


Free Malaysia Today
41 minutes ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Court of Appeal upholds headmaster's acquittal in child sex assault case
The Court of Appeal acquitted Zainuren Mohamed of sexual assault after holding that the rulings of the sessions court and High Court were premised on facts established at the trial. PUTRAJAYA : The Court of Appeal has upheld the acquittal of a former headmaster accused of sexually assaulting an 11-year-old pupil seven years ago, ruling that doubts expressed by the lower courts about the boy's version of events were well-founded. A three-judge panel led by Justice Hashim Hamzah, who sat with Justices Zaini Mazlan and Hayati Akmal Abdul Aziz, dismissed the prosecution's final appeal against a High Court ruling which had cleared Zainuren Mohamed, 58, of the charge. The judges agreed that there was no error in the lower courts' findings, where both the sessions and High Court judges had noted serious gaps and contradictions in the case. Zainuren, originally charged with four counts of assault involving boys aged 11 to 14, was only tried on one count after prosecutors dropped the three other charges in 2021. He was acquitted by the sessions court in 2022, a decision affirmed by the High Court in July 2023. His lawyer, E Gnanasegaran, said the Court of Appeal affirmed all the key points made in the earlier rulings. 'Our submission and the Court of Appeal's findings show that the trial court was right to find the boy's story not credible. This was later confirmed by the High Court. 'There were material gaps between the boy's and his mother's evidence, and the court rightly found that the two teachers who testified were also not credible,' he said. Gnanasegaran said the contradictions in testimony, including from the boy who later said that no assault had taken place, raised real doubts over whether the incident ever occurred. In its appeal, the prosecution argued that the trial judge was wrong to treat the inconsistencies as material, saying they stemmed from long cross-examinations. The appellate court disagreed, ruling that the trial judge had taken care to ensure that the boy could give evidence comfortably. 'There was no misdirection by either court and (their rulings) were well within the facts adduced in court. Hence, we dismiss this appeal,' Hashim said in his ruling. Audrey Wee also appeared for Zainuren while deputy public prosecutor Eyu Ghim Siang appeared for the prosecution.


Malay Mail
an hour ago
- Malay Mail
China's Premier Li Qiang warns global trade frictions are rising, urges cooperation at Summer Davos
TIANJIN, June 25 — Chinese Premier Li Qiang warned on Wednesday that global trade tensions were 'intensifying' as he addressed the opening ceremony of the World Economic Forum in the northern city of Tianjin. Officials including Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong are attending this week's gathering in the port city, which is known colloquially as the 'Summer Davos'. Li said the global economy was 'undergoing profound changes' -- a thinly veiled reference to swingeing tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump. 'Protectionist measures are significantly increasing and global economic and trade frictions are intensifying,' Li added. 'The global economy is deeply integrated and no country can grow or prosper alone,' Li said. 'In times when the global economy faces difficulties, what we need is not the law of the jungle where the weak fall prey to the strong, but cooperation and mutual success for a win-win outcome,' Li said. Beijing's number two official also painted a bullish picture of the Chinese economy, the world's second-largest, which has been beset by slowing growth and a lull in consumer spending. 'China's economy continues to grow steadily, providing strong support for the accelerated recovery of the global economy,' he said. Beijing, he added, was 'stepping up our efforts to implement the strategy of expanding domestic demand'. This was 'promoting China's growth into a major consumption powerhouse based on the solid foundation of a major manufacturing powerhouse'. — AFP