South Korea: Constitutional Court upholds Yoon's impeachment, removes him from office

IANS April 4, 2025 183 views

South Korea's Constitutional Court has removed President Yoon Suk Yeol from office over his imposition of martial law. The unanimous ruling cited severe violations of constitutional order, requiring a snap election within 60 days. Opposition parties celebrated the decision as a victory for democracy, while Yoon's party accepted the verdict. Security was heightened around the National Assembly as tensions rose following the historic ruling.

"The negative effects on the constitutional order... are grave, making the benefits of protecting the Constitution larger than the national losses." – Moon Hyung-bae
Seoul, April 4: The Constitutional Court unanimously upheld the impeachment of President Yoon Suk Yeol on Friday, removing him from office over his short-lived imposition of martial law in December.

Key Points

1

Yoon impeached for unconstitutional martial law decree

2

Court cites grave violations of constitutional order

3

Snap election required within 60 days

4

Opposition hails verdict as "people's victory"

The verdict, which was read by acting court chief Moon Hyung-bae and televised live, took effect immediately, requiring the country to hold a snap presidential election to pick Yoon's successor within 60 days, which many expect to fall on June 3, Yonhap news agency reported.

Yoon was impeached by the opposition-controlled National Assembly in mid-December on charges of violating the Constitution and laws by declaring martial law on December 3, deploying troops to the National Assembly to stop lawmakers from voting down the decree and ordering the arrest of politicians.

"The negative effects on the constitutional order and the repercussions from the defendant's violations of the law are grave, making the benefits of protecting the Constitution by dismissing the defendant larger than the national losses from dismissing the president by an overwhelming degree," Moon said.

The court recognised effectively all of the charges against Yoon, including that he did not meet the legal requirements for declaring martial law and sent troops to the Assembly to stop its reversal of the decree.

The ruling People Power Party said it "humbly accepts" the court's ruling, while the main opposition Democratic Party welcomed it as a "people's victory."

Earlier the National Assembly Secretariat has completely restricted access to outsiders from Thursday to Sunday.

All scheduled seminars and events hosted by lawmakers during this period have been canceled.

"We have restricted access to outsiders and significantly reinforced our police and security as a precaution against any possible situation," an official from the National Assembly Speaker's office told Yonhap.

Comments:

James K. · 12m ago

This is a historic moment for democracy. No leader should be above the law, no matter how powerful. The court made the right call. 🇰🇷

Sophia L. · 24m ago

I'm relieved the court acted decisively. Deploying troops to the National Assembly was a dangerous overreach. Hope the next leader learns from this.

Daniel P. · 38m ago

While I agree with the ruling, I worry about political instability now. A snap election in 60 days? Hope parties can unite for the country's sake.

Eunji C. · 1h ago

"People's victory" feels a bit exaggerated. Yes, justice was served, but let's not celebrate too soon—we still need a stable transition. 🤔

Ryan T. · 1h ago

Respectful criticism: The article could've explained *why* Yoon declared martial law in the first place. Context matters, even if his actions were wrong.

Minho J. · 2h ago

The unanimous decision says it all. No room for debate—Yoon crossed a line. Now, let's focus on rebuilding trust in leadership.

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