Bread, soup, soy milk: South Korean leader’s life in jail

By The Straits Times | Created at 2025-01-19 01:19:42 | Updated at 2025-01-19 04:57:14 3 hours ago
Truth

SEOUL, South Korea – As president of South Korea, Yoon Suk Yeol lived in a luxurious hilltop mansion, threw parties and had a small army of personal guards.

These days, he is alone in a 107-square-foot jail cell, eating simple food such as noodles and kimchi soup, and sleeping on the floor.

This will be his new reality for a while yet, after he was formally arrested on insurrection charges as part of an investigation into his ill-fated declaration of martial law in December 2024.

Yoon, 64, has been in the Seoul Detention Center, a government-run jail south of Seoul, since Wednesday, when he became the first sitting president in South Korean history to be detained in a criminal investigation. When a district court in Seoul issued the warrant to arrest him, he went from being a temporary detainee to a criminal suspect facing an indictment and trial.

That change in status meant that Yoon was unlikely to leave jail anytime soon. Within the next 18 days, criminal investigators and prosecutors were expected to indict him on charges of leading an insurrection during his short-lived martial law last month. If he is convicted, he will face life imprisonment or ​the death penalty.

Yoon’s new circumstances were symbolic of his dramatic fall from grace: from a swaggering head of state to an impeached president to an inmate accused of committing one of the worst offenses in South Korea’s criminal code.

He is the first South Korean to face insurrection charges since the former military dictator Chun Doo-hwan, who was convicted in the 1990s.

As president, Yoon loved to throw parties, often inviting like-minded politicians to evening drinks and even cooking and serving ​rolled egg and barbecue to his presidential press corps. He showed off his well-honed entertaining skills ​abroad when he belted out “American Pie” during a White House dinner in 2023.​

Now, ​Yoon will wake up ​not to presidential aides and chefs catering to his needs, but to a simple jail breakfast usually made up of dumpling soup, bread or cereals. ​An average meal in jail costs US$1.20 (S$1.60).

The dramatic political upheaval he unleash​ed appears to have stunned him as much as everyday South Koreans.

“Ironically, it was after I was impeached that I truly realised​ that I am, indeed, the president,” Yoon said in a lengthy statement on Jan 15. NYTIMES

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