
SEOUL, January 22 ------ South Korea's impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol appeared at the Constitutional Court for the first time, and pledged to cooperate with the judges who will decide whether to remove him from office.
The East Asian country was plunged into political chaos by Yoon's Dec. 3 martial law declaration, which lasted just six hours before lawmakers voted it down. They later impeached him, stripping him of his duties. He also became the first sitting South Korean president to be arrested in a criminal probe on insurrection grounds. Thousands of protesters — both for and against Yoon — flocked to the Constitutional Court, which is holding hearings to decide whether to uphold his impeachment. "I will respond to any questions or provide further remarks, if necessary," Yoon told the judge.
Yoon was asked during the hearing whether he had instructed top military commanders to "drag out" lawmakers from parliament to prevent them voting down his martial law decree. "No," he told the judge. Agence France-Presse (AFP) reporters saw Yoon — who remains South Korea's official head of state — driven into the building in a blue Justice Ministry van from the detention center where he is being held pending a criminal probe on insurrection grounds. Court spokesman Cheon Jae-hyun told reporters that Yoon's legal team had requested to call "at least 24 individuals" as witnesses, including election-related officials. Yoon and his legal team have sought to justify his attempt to suspend civilian rule as a necessary measure due to election fraud, after the opposition won parliamentary elections by a landslide last year.
According to pool reporters, he appeared in court wearing a suit and not his standard-issue prison uniform, which he has been required to wear since he was formally arrested on Sunday. Yoon's legal team said he wanted to "personally appear to explain the circumstances surrounding the declaration of martial law."
'Entirely incomprehensible'
If the court rules against Yoon, he will lose the presidency and elections will be called within 60 days. The lawyers prosecuting the case, who were selected by the parliament, slammed the comments made by Yoon and his lawyers as "largely contradictory, irrational and unclear, making them entirely incomprehensible." "If they continue to evade responsibility as they did today, it will only work against them in the impeachment trial and cause even greater disappointment among the public," they added.
Yoon stayed away from the first two hearings last week, but the trial — which could last months — will continue even if he is absent. Yoon has also been refusing to submit to separate questioning by the Corruption Investigation Office (CIO), the body in charge of the criminal probe into his martial law declaration. It said it had attempted to compel him to attend but due to the "suspect's continued refusal to cooperate" they abandoned the efforts. As Yoon is attending the impeachment trial, questioning him "will be difficult" on Tuesday, a CIO official told reporters.
'Riling public opinion'
Yoon made his first court appearance on Saturday at a hearing on whether to extend his detention. When it was extended, hundreds of pro-Yoon protesters attacked the court building and scuffled with police officers. Dozens were arrested. The impeached president's decision to start showing up at the Constitutional Court hearing is more about inflaming his die-hard supporters than helping the judicial process along, legal expert Kim Nam-ju said. "Whether it's the legal representative speaking or Yoon himself speaking it's nearly the same, it's more about riling public opinion," Kim told AFP. But whatever Yoon's motives, "from the perspective of the Constitutional Court judges, hearing directly from the defendant is far more significant," he said. Yoon's presence will allow "the judges to confirm the facts firsthand," he added. AFP
Source: manilatimes.net
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