Key Points

South Korea's former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo will face an arrest warrant hearing this week. He is accused of aiding former President Yoon Suk Yeol's botched martial law imposition in December. Prosecutors charge Han with abetting insurrection and destroying official documents related to the decree. The special counsel claims Han failed in his constitutional duty to prevent the unlawful martial law declaration.

Key Points: South Korea Ex-PM Han Arrest Warrant Hearing Over Yoon Martial Law

  • Hearing scheduled for August 27 on Han's arrest warrant request
  • Charged with abetting insurrection and document destruction
  • Accused of lying under oath to Constitutional Court
  • Failed to prevent Yoon's unconstitutional martial law decree
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South Korea: Court to hold arrest warrant hearing for ex-PM Han on August 27

Former PM Han Duck-soo faces arrest over alleged role in Yoon Suk Yeol's botched martial law imposition. Hearing set for August 27 on insurrection charges.

"Han was the top constitutional institution that could have prevented the imposition of the unconstitutional and unlawful martial law in advance - Assistant Special Counsel Park Ji-young"

Seoul, Aug 25

A hearing will be held this week to determine whether to issue an arrest warrant for South Korea's former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo over his alleged role in former President Yoon Suk Yeol's botched imposition of martial law, a court said on Monday.

The Seoul Central District Court said it has scheduled the hearing for 1:30 p.m. on Wednesday, August 27, after special counsel Cho Eun-suk requested a warrant to arrest Han on charges that include abetting the ringleader of an insurrection, falsifying and destroying official documents, and committing perjury, Yonhap News Agency reported.

Han is accused of abetting Yoon's short-lived martial law imposition in December by proposing a Cabinet meeting before the decree's declaration and drafting and later destroying a revised proclamation intended to enhance the legitimacy of the decree.

In addition, the former Prime Minister is suspected of lying under oath at the Constitutional Court and the National Assembly that he was not aware of the existence of a copy of the martial law declaration until after the decree was lifted.

On Sunday, a special counsel team filed for a court warrant to arrest Han.

Special Counsel Cho Eun-suk's team filed the request for the writ on charges of aiding Yoon's efforts to impose the martial law decree on December 3 last year.

The special counsel team said it filed for the arrest warrant against Han, citing his failure to prevent the imposition of martial law.

"A Prime Minister is the sole public servant appointed by a President, playing a role in assisting in the task of upholding the Constitution as the No. 1 state institution," assistant special counsel Park Ji-young said during a press briefing.

"Han was the top constitutional institution that could have prevented the imposition of the unconstitutional and unlawful martial law in advance," she said.

Han was among the six Cabinet members Yoon called in to share his plans to impose martial law. He also took part in a Cabinet meeting that reviewed the decree before its declaration and another one that lifted it the next day.

At the time, Han said he was not aware of the martial law decree until the Cabinet meeting that lifted martial law, claiming that he later realised a copy of the decree was in his pocket.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
"Found the decree in his pocket" - what kind of excuse is that? Sounds like something from a Bollywood comedy! 😂 Seriously though, leaders must be held accountable for such serious actions.
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Michael C
Interesting to see how other Asian democracies handle constitutional crises. South Korea's special counsel system seems quite effective compared to how these things often drag on elsewhere.
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Ananya R
As an Indian, I appreciate that South Korea is taking this seriously. Martial law is no joke - we learned that lesson in 1975. No leader should have unchecked power.
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Siddharth J
While accountability is important, I hope this doesn't become politically motivated. Sometimes these investigations target opposition figures unfairly. Due process must be followed properly.
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Nisha Z
Destroying official documents? That's a serious offense anywhere. In India, we have the Official Secrets Act for such things. Hope justice is served properly. 🤞

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