Detained South Korea's Yoon refuses questioning and challenges arrest
South Korea's arrested
President Yoon Suk Yeol did not attend a second day of questioning by
investigators on Thursday, further stonewalling a criminal probe into whether
he committed insurrection with his bid to impose martial law.
Yoon on Wednesday
became the first sitting South Korean president to be arrested and
was held at the Seoul Detention Centre after refusing to cooperate.
He remained in the
centre on Thursday, with his lawyer citing his health as a factor for his
absence from the questioning. The investigators did not elaborate on why they
did not compel him to attend.
Authorities have 48
hours to question the suspended president, after which they must release him or
seek a warrant to detain him for up to 20 days. That countdown has been paused,
however, as his lawyers have asked a court to review the legality of the arrest.
Yoon's refusal to
cooperate with investigators comes as the Constitutional Court held a second
hearing in his impeachment trial to determine whether to remove him permanently
or reinstate his presidential powers.
South Korea is
grappling with its worst political crisis in decades, sparked by Yoon's
brief attempt to impose martial law on Dec. 3 that was voted down by
parliament.
In opening arguments
at the Constitutional Court, an opposition Democratic Party lawmaker condemned
Yoon for "the Dec. 3 insurrection" and said Yoon and a small number
of supporters had sought to stoke chaos by refusing to accept his arrest warrant.
"This impeachment
trial decides whether or not to bring someone like this back to the position of
commander-in-chief in control of the military," said Jung Chung-rae, the
lawmaker who heads parliament's Legislation and Judiciary Committee.
In response, one of
Yoon's defence team said his impeachment was not intended to defend the
constitution but for the opposition "to use the majority power of
parliament to usurp the position of the president".
The DP used its
majority in parliament to vote to impeach Yoon, although some 12 lawmakers
from his own party also voted in favour.
Yoon's legal team has
denied he masterminded an insurrection, a crime in South Korea punishable by
life imprisonment or even technically by the death penalty.
The last executions in
South Korea were in 1997, for criminal offences such as murder.
Opinion polls
conducted by Realmeter on Dec. 4, the day after Yoon's martial law declaration,
showed 73.6% supported Yoon's impeachment. Its latest survey from Jan. 9-10
showed support for Yoon's ruling party rose to 40.8%, catching up with the DP
which posted 42.2%.
Yoon's lawyer Cho
Dae-hyen said the suspended president's decision to declare martial law had
been made in good faith based on his view that the country was in a state of
emergency.
Another of Yoon's
lawyers, Bae Jin-han, said: "Some say 'you get impeached if you breathe'
nowadays."
Yoon's arrest ended a
weeks-long standoff with authorities after police swooped before dawn on his
fortified hillside villa in Seoul, to the dismay of supporters at the
site.
Yoon said he turned
himself in for questioning to prevent what he called the risk of
"unsavoury bloodshed", though he continued to protest that it was an
illegal investigation and invalid arrest warrant.
PROTESTERS SUPPORT
YOON
Yoon has so far
refused to talk to investigators who had prepared a questionnaire of more than
200 pages, an official from the Corruption Investigation Office for
High-ranking Officials (CIO) leading the criminal inquiry said.
His questioning had
been due to resume at 2 p.m. (0500 GMT) on Thursday, but the CIO said that they
had been informed by Yoon's side that he would not attend.
Yonhap cited Yoon
Kab-keun, one of Yoon's lawyers, as saying that his health was a factor and
saying further questioning was pointless, without elaborating.
A small crowd of
protesters supporting Yoon gathered and sat on a road outside the CIO office,
calling the president's arrest illegitimate.
His lawyers have said
the arrest warrant is illegal because it was issued by a court in the
wrong jurisdiction and the team set up to investigate him had no legal mandate
to do so.
Yoon's legal team on
Thursday filed a complaint over the warrant with the prosecutors' office
against the CIO chief and some police officials.
The political crisis
has reverberated across Asia's fourth-largest economy and piled pressure on the
won currency.
South Korea's central
bank governor said on Thursday that the most important factor determining
the health of the economy in coming months was whether the political chaos
stabilised.
"That is why a
normalisation of the political process is way more important than lowering
interest rates a month earlier or later," said Rhee Chang-yong, speaking
after the Bank of Korea unexpectedly held policy interest rates steady
at 3.00% on Thursday, defying analyst expectations of a cut in rates.
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