South Korea's Supreme Court to rule on ex-President Yoon's obstruction of justice charges on July 9


Seoul, July 2 (IANS) South Korea’s Supreme Court will deliver its verdict next week on charges that former President Yoon Suk Yeol obstructed justice by blocking investigators from detaining him in the wake of his failed martial law bid in 2024, legal sources said Thursday.

The sentencing hearing will be held at 2 pm next Thursday, marking the top court’s first ruling for Yoon over charges stemming from his surprise declaration of martial law on December 3, 2024.

The jailed former president is accused of having ordered his bodyguards to stop investigators from executing a warrant to detain him in January 2025, Yonhap News Agency reported.

He is also charged with violating the rights of nine Cabinet members by not calling them to an advance meeting to review his martial law plan, falsifying public documents by revising the martial law proclamation after the decree was lifted in order to disguise its procedural flaws and later discarding the document.

An appeals court sentenced Yoon to seven years in prison in April after finding him guilty of the charges, an increase of two years from the lower court’s ruling but less than the 10 years recommended by a special counsel team.

Yoon’s main trial on charges of leading an insurrection through the martial law bid is ongoing at an appellate court. In the first ruling, he was sentenced to life in prison.

Earlier in June, a Seoul court sentenced Yoon Suk Yeol to 30 years in prison after finding him guilty of ordering drone infiltrations into North Korea in an attempt to heighten cross-border tensions and create a basis for his martial law declaration in December 2024.

The Seoul Central District Court convicted the jailed former president on charges of benefiting the enemy and abuse of power in its ruling that matched special counsel Cho Eun-suk’s sentencing recommendation.

The court recognised that Yoon had ordered the operation in October 2024 to provoke Pyongyang and use the anticipated increase in cross-border tensions as a pretext for his December 3 declaration of martial law.

Yoon’s legal team appealed the ruling hours later.

The court also sentenced South Korea’s former Defence Minister Kim Yong-hyun to 30 years in prison for his role in such operations, higher than the 25 years sought by the special counsel.

It sentenced Yeo In-hyung, former head of the Defence Counterintelligence Command, to 15 years in prison for his involvement in the operation, while Kim Yong-dae, former chief of the Drone Operations Command, received a three-year sentence suspended for five years.

“In order to create conditions for martial law, the defendants decided to use the military tactic of psychological warfare to incite North Korea and induce a provocation, and use that to prompt an armed provocation, such as a local conflict, or create a national security crisis situation resulting from heightened military tension,” the court said.

It said the actions amounted to “betraying” the people’s expectation that the president and the defence minister would use military force only for legitimate purposes, adding that there was a personal motivation behind the operation.

Yoon’s legal team has argued that the drone deployment was a legitimate military operation in response to North Korea’s launches of trash-carrying balloons into South Korea in 2024.

The court ruled that the operation undermined South Korea’s security interests by exposing its military assets to North Korea and, as a result, strengthening North Korea’s military readiness.

In October 2024, Pyongyang accused Seoul of drone infiltrations and dropping propaganda leaflets over the North’s capital. Then Defence Minister Kim had initially denied the North Korean accusation. The defence ministry later said it could neither confirm nor deny the accusation.

–IANS

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