Prosecutors seek 30-year prison term for South Korea's Yoon for drone
flights over Pyongyang
[April 24, 2026]
By KIM TONG-HYUNG
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korean prosecutors Friday requested a
30-year prison term for ousted President Yoon Suk Yeol over allegations
he deliberately tried to escalate tensions with North Korea in 2024 by
ordering drone flights over Pyongyang as he sought to create justifiable
conditions for martial law at home.
Yoon is charged with benefiting an adversary and abusing his powers,
which are among a long list of indictments against the conservative
former leader over his short-lived imposition of martial law in South
Korea in December 2024.
The request came in the closing stages of a trial at the Seoul Central
District Court, where a team of investigators led by special prosecutor
Cho Eun-suk said Yoon and his top defense officials were responsible for
alleged drone infiltrations into North Korea, about two months before he
imposed martial law while portraying the liberals as North
Korea-sympathizing, “anti-state” forces.
Yoon’s lawyers, who had denied the accusations, did not immediately
comment on the prosecution’s requested prison term.
In February, the court sentenced Yoon to life in prison after finding
him guilty of the more serious rebellion charge. That verdict was
appealed both by Yoon and prosecutors, who had sought a death sentence.
Cho’s team in a statement Friday claimed that Yoon tried to create a
warlike situation between the Koreas while plotting an authoritarian
push to remove his political opponents and “monopolize and extend his
power.” Prosecutors are seeking a 25-year prison term for Yoon’s former
defense minister, Kim Yong Hyun, a key confidant who helped plan and
mobilize forces for the martial law declaration.
North Korea accused Seoul of flying drones over its capital, Pyongyang,
to drop propaganda leaflets three times in October 2024. Kim initially
made a vague denial, but Seoul's Defense Ministry later switched to
saying it couldn’t confirm whether or not the claims were true. Tensions
with North Korea rose sharply at the time.
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South Korea's impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol attends a hearing of
his impeachment trial at the Constitutional Court in Seoul, South
Korea, Feb. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, Pool, File)

Yoon proceeded with his late night martial law declaration on Dec.
3, 2024, delivering a televised address in which he blasted liberals
over a range of issues, but largely over their impeachments of his
top officials and cuts to his government’s budget bill.
The decree lasted about six hours until a quorum of lawmakers broke
through a blockade of heavily armed soldiers and police Yoon had
deployed to the National Assembly. They then voted to overturn it,
forcing his Cabinet to lift the measure.
Yoon was suspended from office on Dec. 14, 2024, after being
impeached by the liberal-led legislature and was formally removed by
the Constitutional Court in April 2025. He was arrested in July that
year and has been undergoing various criminal trials since.
Though brief, Yoon’s martial law decree threw the country into a
severe political crisis, paralyzing politics and high-level
diplomacy and rattling financial markets. The turmoil eased only
after his liberal rival Lee Jae Myung won an early presidential
election in June last year.
Shortly after taking office, Lee approved legislation that launched
independent investigations into Yoon’s martial law stunt and other
criminal allegations involving him, his wife and associates.
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