Key Points

South Korea's former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo will face weekly court hearings starting September 30 for his alleged role in abetting former President Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law imposition. The trial will examine surveillance footage showing Han handling martial law documents and conferring with officials. Han faces multiple charges including perjury, falsifying official documents, and destroying evidence related to the December declaration. The case represents a significant political scandal involving South Korea's highest former officials.

Key Points: South Korea Ex-PM Han Weekly Insurrection Trial Begins September 30

  • Han accused of suggesting martial law Cabinet meeting to President Yoon
  • Surveillance footage shows Han handling martial law declaration documents
  • Indicted for perjury at Constitutional Court and National Assembly
  • Charged with destroying revised proclamation to enhance decree legitimacy
2 min read

South Korea's Ex-PM Han's insurrection trial to be held once a week

Former PM Han Duck-soo faces weekly trial for abetting Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law declaration, perjury, and document destruction starting September 30 in Seoul.

"The formal trial will begin September 30 and proceed swiftly with one hearing every Monday - Seoul Central District Court"

Seoul, Sep 16

The insurrection trial of South Korea's former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo will be held once a week starting later this month, a court said on Tuesday.

Han has been indicted on charges of abetting former President Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law imposition in December, perjury, falsifying and destroying official documents, and other offences, Yonhap news agency reported.

During the first pretrial hearing at the Seoul Central District Court on Tuesday, the bench said the formal trial will begin September 30 and proceed swiftly with one hearing every Monday.

The first formal hearing will be used to examine surveillance camera footage from the presidential office on the day martial law was declared on December 3.

Before Yoon declared martial law, he convened a Cabinet meeting at the presidential office, allegedly at Han's suggestion.

The footage reportedly shows Han gathering papers printed with the martial law declaration and Yoon's address to the nation from the meeting room.

It also allegedly shows Han checking whether the quorum for a Cabinet meeting is met by counting with his hand, and conferring with the then Interior Minister Lee Sang-min after the meeting is over.

Han's indictment accuses him of drafting a revised proclamation after December 3 with the aim of enhancing the legitimacy of the decree and later destroying it.

He also stands accused of lying under oath at the Constitutional Court and the National Assembly that he was not aware that Yoon had given him a copy of the martial law declaration until after the decree was lifted.

Han did not attend Tuesday's pretrial hearing as it was not required.

Earlier in August, a special counsel team indicted Han on charges of abetting Yoon's failed imposition of martial law.

Han was indicted without physical detention on charges of abetting the ringleader of an insurrection, perjury, falsifying and destroying official documents, and other offences, according to special counsel Cho Eun-suk's team.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Perjury and destroying official documents? That's serious corruption. Reminds me how important transparency is in governance. Every country needs to learn from such cases.
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Arjun K
Martial law imposition in a democracy is always concerning. Good that they're investigating this properly. Hope the CCTV footage reveals the truth!
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Michael C
Interesting to see how other Asian democracies handle political crises. The weekly trial schedule suggests they want to handle this systematically rather than rush it.
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Shreya B
As an Indian watching this, I appreciate that no one is above the law. Former PM being held accountable sets a good precedent for all democracies 🙏
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David E
While accountability is important, I hope this doesn't become a political witch hunt. The evidence from surveillance footage should be examined objectively without bias.
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Nisha Z
Counting cabinet members with his hand? That sounds so casual for something as serious as martial law! Shows how power can make people careless about procedures.

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