It is reported that South Korean President Yin Zheng was impeached due to martial law

South Korean prosecutor was sued on Sunday Imprint on South Korean President Yin Xilie According to news reports, he rebelled due to a brief implementation of martial law. If the crime was established, the criminal charged may be sentenced to death or life imprisonment.

This is the latest blow to Mr. Yin. He was impeached and arrested for his remarks on December 3 Martial law This has caught the country's huge political turmoil and shakes the political and financial markets of South Korea and the international image of the country. Except for criminal judicial procedures, the Constitutional Court is currently reviewing whether President Yin's presidential position is officially lifted or restored his position.

South Korean media reports reported that the Central Procuratorate of the Seoul issued a public prosecution against Yin by rebellion. The reporter called the prosecutor's office and Yin's lawyer.

Yin is a conservative person who resolutely denies any improper behavior, saying that his martial arts order is a legal governance act, aiming to increase the public's danger of the public about the danger of the national parliament controlled by liberals. The agenda also impeached senior officials. During the announcement of the martial law, Yin claimed that the rally was "the nest of the criminals" and vowed to destroy "shameless North Korean followers and anti -national forces."

Korean martial law
Yin Xilie, an impeached Korean President Yin Xilie, attended the fourth hearings of impeachment trials held in the Constitutional Court of Seoul, South Korea on Thursday, January 23, 2025. Jeon Heon Kyun/Swimming Pool Photos from the Associated Press, file

After the martial law decree was announced on December 3, Yin sent the army and the police to the parliament, but there were still enough members to try to enter the parliament hall, to vote to reject Yin's decree, forcing the cabinet to cancel the decree.

This martial law was the first time in South Korea for more than 40 years, but it lasted only six hours. However, it evoked people's painful memories of people's pain in the past 1960s and 1980s. At that time, the military-supported ruler used martial laws and emergency laws to suppress opponents.

The South Korean Constitution has given the president's power to announce the martial law to maintain the order in wartime and other similar emergencies, but many experts said that when Yin announced the martial law, South Korea was not in this situation.

Yin insisted that he had no intention of disrupting the work of the parliament, including all voting for his decree, and said that he sent troops and police to maintain order. However, the military unit commander sent to the parliament told the parliamentary hearing or investigator that Yin Xia ordered them to drag out the parliament.

The investigation of Yin has exacerbated the country's serious internal differences, and hostile protesters regularly hold rally in the center of Seoul.

On January 19, the local court approved the formal arrest order to extend the detention of Yin. Later, dozens of Yin supporters rushed into the court building and destroyed doors and windows and other property. They also attacked the police with bricks, steel pipes and other items. The violent incident caused 17 policemen to be injured, and the police claimed that they had detained 46 protesters.

Yin refused to investigate the authorities inquiring or detained him earlier earlier. On January 15, he was arrested in a large -scale law enforcement operation at the Presidential Palace.

Leading Yin Mou's investigation was the Office of Senior Officials' Corruption Investigation Office, but since Yin was detained, Yin Mou has always refused to attend the inquiry of the chief information officer, saying that the office did not investigate the legal power of the rebellion allegations. The chief information officer said that he could investigate Yin's rebellion allegations because it was related to his abuse of power and other allegations.

Mr. Yin enjoys most criminal prosecution presidential exemptions, but this privilege does not apply to the charges of rebellion or rebellion.

On Friday, the chief information officer transferred Yin's case to the Seoul Prosecutor's Office, and asked him to sue him with rebellion, abuse of power, and obstructing Congress. According to Korean law, the rebel leader may face life imprisonment or death penalty.

Yin's defense team urged the prosecutor to immediately release Yin and investigate the chief information officer in a statement in a statement.

Yin's Defense Minister, Director of Police, and several other military commanders have been arrested for the role played in martial laws.