According to the South Korean opposition party and many Korean media reports, South Korean prosecutors have impeached President Yin Xilie, and the charges were after the brief implementation of the martial law last month, leading the rebellion.
Yin is a conservative person who enjoys the presidential exemption and avoids most criminal prosecution, but this privilege is not suitable for allegations of the crime of rebellion or rebellion. According to Korean law, the rebel leader may face life imprisonment or death penalty.
According to Reuters, Democratic spokesman Han Min -hyun said at a press conference that "the prosecutor has decided to sue Yin Shilie, and he is facing the chaos and chaos."
According to the Washington Post, the announcement announced on Sunday made Yin Enhui the first President of South Korea to face prosecution and criminal investigation.
On December 14, the voting of the Congress led by the opposition decided to suspend President Yin's position, and President Yin became the second impeached conservative president in South Korea.
After a few weeks of martial law, the impeached Korean president was detained
On January 23, 2025, the Constitutional Court of Seoul, South Korea, Yin Xilie, who was impeached South Korean President Yin Xilie, attended the fourth hearing of the impeachment trial of the martial law in a short period of time. (Jeon Heon Kyun/Associated Pool Photos)
Earlier this month, he was arrested for the martial law issued on December 3, 2024. The order caused the fourth largest economy in Asia and an important allies in the United States to fall into a political turmoil. Mr. Yin resolutely denied any improper behavior, saying that his martial arts order was a legal governance act, aiming to increase the public's danger of the national parliament controlled by liberals. The National Assembly hindered his agenda and impeached senior officials.
When he announced the martial law, he said that the rally was "the nest of the criminals" and vowed to eliminate the "shameless North Korean follower and anti -national forces."
He sent military and police to participate in parliament, but there were still enough members to try to enter the parliament hall, unanimously voting to veto the decree of Yin, forcing his cabinet to cancel the decree.
Although Yin revoked the decree in just six hours, the implementation of martial laws was the first time in South Korea for more than 40 years, and it evoked people's painful memories of people's pain in the past 1960s to the 1980s.
Yin refused to investigate the authorities' efforts to ask or detain him. After a few days of confrontation with the director and the director, Yin was arrested in a large -scale law enforcement operation in the Presidential Palace on January 15, becoming the first time that the arrested South Korea was the president of the president. According to Reuters, Yin himself has been a prosecutor and has been imprisoned separately since then.
On Thursday, January 23, 2025, supporters of the impeached Korean President Yin Xilie participated in the rally against impeachment near the Seoul Constitutional Court in South Korea. (Associated Press photo/An handsome)
The impeached Korean president avoided being arrested after one hour of confrontation
According to the Associated Press, the local court approved the formal arrest warrant on January 19 to extend his detention to Yin. Later, dozens of his 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.
Except for criminal judicial procedures, the Constitutional Court is currently reviewing whether President Yin's presidential position is officially lifted or restored his position.
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.
On Saturday, January 25, 2025, supporters of the impeached Korean President Yin Xilie participated in the opposition rally held in Seoul, South Korea. (Associated Press photo/An handsome)
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.
Yin's defense team urged the prosecutor to immediately release Yin and investigate the chief information officer in a statement in a statement.
South Korean media, including United News Agency, reported on Sunday that the Office of the Central Prosecutor of Seoul charged Yin Mou with a rebellion.
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Yin's Defense Minister, Director of Police, and several other military commanders have been arrested for the role played in martial laws.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.