South Korea's ousted President Yoon Suk Yeol and his former defense minister, Kim Yong Hyun, were sentenced to 30 years in prison by the Seoul Central District Court. The court found them guilty of aiding an adversary and abusing their power for ordering drone flights over Pyongyang in October 2024, according to multiple reports.
Key Takeaways
South Korean courts sentenced ousted President Yoon Suk Yeol to 30 years for ordering drone flights over Pyongyang. The court found he aimed to provoke North Korea and justify martial law.
- Former President Yoon Suk Yeol sentenced to 30 years
- Charges include aiding an adversary and abusing power
- Drone flights in October 2024 heightened tensions with North Korea
- Yoon's lawyers argue the drones were a response to North Korean balloons
- Martial law declaration led to his impeachment
Source Claims Check
1 Difference Found| Claim | Status | Reason | |
|---|---|---|---|
| North Korean Balloons | 1 Difference | Majority reports response to balloons; others cite martial law pretext | ▼ |
| Drone Incursion Charges | Broad Agreement | Yoon sentenced for aiding enemy and abusing power | |
| Martial Law Declaration | Broad Agreement | Yoon declared martial law in December 2024 | |
| Martial Law Duration | Broad Agreement | Martial law lasted about six hours. |
The court ruled that Yoon sought to provoke North Korea into launching armed attacks or other serious provocations against South Korea to manufacture a national emergency. The drone flights were seen as an attempt to justify declaring martial law at home and harmed South Korea's military interests by exposing its capabilities and prompting North Korea to strengthen its defense posture.
Yoon's lawyers criticized the ruling, arguing that the drone flights were a response to North Korea flying thousands of trash-carrying balloons into the South earlier in 2024. They contended that a guilty verdict would undermine South Korea's security interests but did not immediately say whether they would appeal.
This sentence adds to Yoon's previous life imprisonment for leading an insurrection linked to his short-lived martial law declaration in December 2024, which plunged Asia’s fourth-largest economy into its deepest political turmoil in decades. The court found that Yoon accused liberal lawmakers of being North Korea-sympathizing 'anti-state' forces and cited a range of grievances, including the opposition's impeachment of senior officials and cuts to his government's budget bill.
Yoon was removed from office last year after the Constitutional Court upheld his impeachment, triggering a snap election won by liberal President Lee Jae Myung. The verdict in the most serious case of rebellion has been appealed both by Yoon and prosecutors, who had sought a death sentence. As reported by The Guardian and Reuters, drone flights remain a flashpoint in tensions between the two Koreas, which remain technically at war.
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