Yoon Suk Yeol removed as South Korea's president over short-lived
martial law
[April 04, 2025]
By HYUNG-JIN KIM and KIM TONG-HYUNG
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea’s Constitutional Court unanimously
removed Yoon Suk Yeol from office Friday, ending his tumultuous
presidency and setting up a new election, four months after he threw the
nation into turmoil with an ill-fated declaration of martial law.
The verdict capped a dramatic fall for Yoon, a former star prosecutor
who became president in 2022, just a year after he entered politics.
In a nationally televised hearing, the court’s acting chief Moon
Hyung-bae said the eight-member bench found Yoon’s actions were
unconstitutional and had a grave impact.
“By declaring martial law in breach of the constitution and other laws,
the defendant brought back the history of abusing state emergency
decrees, shocked the people and caused confusion in the society,
economy, politics, diplomacy and all other areas,” Moon said.
“Given the negative impact on constitutional order caused by the
defendant’s violation of laws and its ripple effects are grave, we find
that the benefits of upholding the constitution by dismissing the
defendant far outweigh the national losses from the dismissal of the
president,” the justice concluded.
Protesters erupt in jubilation and sorrow
Anti-Yoon protesters near the court erupted into tears and danced when
the verdict was announced in the late morning. Two women wept as they
hugged and an old man near them leapt to his feet and screamed with joy.
The crowd later marched through Seoul streets.

Outside Yoon's official residence, many supporters cried, screamed and
yelled at journalists when they saw the news of the verdict on a giant
TV screen. But they quickly cooled down after their organizer pleaded
for calm.
“We will absolutely not be shaken!” a protest leader shouted on stage.
“Anyone who accepts this ruling and prepares for an early presidential
election is our enemy.”
No major violence has been reported by late afternoon.
“Political risks related to domestic polarization and policy instability
remain,” Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul,
said. “But the Constitutional Court’s unanimous ruling has removed a
major source of uncertainty. Korean government institutions have
withstood a volatile mix of legislative obstruction and executive
overreach that posed the greatest challenge to democracy in a
generation.”
Korea faces an election with deep divisions
An election will be held within two months for a new president. But a
festering divide over Yoon’s impeachment could complicate South Korea’s
efforts to deal with crucial issues like President Donald Trump’s
tariffs and other “America First” policies, observers say.
Yoon said in a statement issued via his defense team that he deeply
regrets failing to live up to the public's expectations, but stopped
short of explicitly accepting the verdict. There have been fears he
would incite efforts to resist his removal, as he earlier vowed to fight
to the end.
He added that he will pray for the country and its people. “It has been
the greatest honor of my life to serve our nation,” Yoon said.
Yoon’s ruling People Power Party said it would accept the decision, but
one of Yoon’s lawyers, Yoon Kap-keun, called the ruling “completely
incomprehensible” and a “pure political decision."
Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, the country’s acting leader, vowed to
maintain public safety and order and ensure a smooth transition to the
next administration.
Surveys show Lee Jae-myung, leader of the main liberal opposition
Democratic Party, is the early favorite to win the upcoming presidential
by-election, though he faces several trials for corruption and other
charges.

[to top of second column]
|

Moon Hyung-bae, center, acting chief justice of South Korea's
Constitutional Court, speaks during the final ruling of South Korean
President Yoon Suk Yeol's impeachment at the Constitutional Court on
Friday, April 4, 2025 in Seoul, South Korea. (Kim Min-Hee, Japan
Pool/Kyodo News via AP)

“It will be an uphill battle for the conservative party to win a snap
presidential election,” said Duyeon Kim, a senior analyst at the Center
for a New American Security in Washington. “If Lee wins, South Korea’s
foreign policy will likely look very different from what the U.S. and
like-minded countries have enjoyed during Yoon’s presidency because of
the demands of the progressive base.”
Lee welcomed the ruling and credited the South Korean people for
“protecting our democratic republic.”
Crisis started with a night of chaos four months ago
Martial law lasted only six hours, but left behind a political crisis,
rattling financial markets and unsettling the country’s diplomatic
partners.
After announcing martial law late at night on Dec. 3, Yoon, a
conservative, sent hundreds of soldiers to the liberal
opposition-controlled National Assembly, election offices and other
sites. Special operations soldiers smashed windows at the assembly and
scuffled with protesters, evoking traumatic memories of the country's
past military rules among many South Koreans.
Enough lawmakers, including some from the ruling party, managed to enter
the assembly to vote down Yoon's decree unanimously.
Some senior military and police officers sent to the assembly testified
Yoon ordered them to drag out lawmakers to block the vote on his decree
or to detain his political rivals. Yoon says the troops were deployed to
the assembly simply to maintain order.
Yoon was impeached by the National Assembly on Dec. 14. The assembly
accused him of violating the constitution and other laws by suppressing
assembly activities, attempting to detain politicians, and undermining
peace across the country.
In his final testimony at the Constitutional Court hearing, Yoon said
his decree was a desperate attempt to draw public support of his fight
against the “wickedness” of the Democratic Party, which had obstructed
his agenda, impeached top officials and slashed the government’s budget
bill. He earlier called the National Assembly “a den of criminals” and
“anti-state forces.”

The Constitutional Court ruled Yoon infringed upon the assembly's right
to demand martial law be lifted, the freedom of political party
activities and the neutrality of the military. It also said Yoon’s
political impasse with the opposition wasn’t the type of emergency
situation that required martial law and that Yoon’s decree lacked
required legal procedures such as deliberation by a formal Cabinet
meeting.
Yoon still faces criminal charges
Yoon has been indicted on charges of rebellion in connection with his
decree, a charge that carries the death penalty or a life sentence if
convicted. He became the first South Korean president to be arrested or
indicted while in office.
Yoon was released from jail in March after a Seoul district court
cancelled his arrest. That allows him to stand trial without detention.
His removal from office also costs Yoon the presidential immunity that
protected him from most criminal prosecutions. This means he could face
other criminal charges, such as abuse of power, in connection with his
martial law decree, some observers say.
___
Associated Press writer Foster Klug contributed to this report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |