South Korea police raise security levels ahead of Yoon impeachment verdict

By The Straits Times | Created at 2025-04-03 09:10:53 | Updated at 2025-04-04 18:30:41 1 day ago

SEOUL – South Korean police began dialling up their security levels on April 3 in preparation for a Constitutional Court ruling on President Yoon Suk Yeol’s impeachment, as they sealed off areas around the court.

Police took the alert to the second-highest level on April 3 and said they would issue the top alert on April 4, enabling the deployment of 100 per cent of the force. The top alert is typically issued in response to the potential for mass casualty events, acts of terrorism or major disasters.

Police have already cleared a 150m radius around the courthouse.

“The area surrounding the court is basically sealed off from any protesters,” an official from the Korean National Police Agency told AFP.

The move comes as multiple embassies – including the United States and France – issued warnings to their citizens to avoid political rallies or mass gatherings in connection to the April 4 verdict.

Authorities are hoping to avoid a repeat of the 2017 presidential impeachment ruling, when four people died after the court upheld the removal of former president Park Geun-hye.

At the time, Park’s supporters clashed with authorities, piling onto police buses, smashing windows with wooden sticks and assaulting officers.

Ahead of the April 4 ruling, schools, embassies, major corporations, tourist sites and museums near the courthouse announced they would be closed.

Mr Lee Ho-young, acting chief of the Korean National Police Agency, has said the ongoing situation has become “more grave than ever”, citing “threats to the safety of key figures” and possibility of violent and illegal incidents.

Mr Yoon plunged democratic South Korea into political turmoil when he declared martial law on Dec 3, 2024, suspending civilian rule and sending soldiers to Parliament.

The suspended president still commands the backing of extreme supporters – who include controversial religious figures and YouTubers – who have staged protests for weeks in the run-up to the verdict.

Pro-Yoon rallies turned violent in January when these supporters, angered by the court’s approval of Mr Yoon’s formal arrest warrant, stormed a Seoul courthouse, injuring at least 50 police officers and vandalising the building by smashing windows and doors.

Since the martial law bid, South Korea has effectively been “a leaderless state” and “unable to effectively stem the tide of violence”, Dr Vladimir Tikhonov, Korean Studies professor at the University of Oslo, told AFP.

Police said its forces will also be deployed to the National Assembly, media companies and the headquarters of both ruling and opposition parties.

In Seoul, more than 14,000 riot police will be deployed, and are currently closely monitoring around 20 YouTubers for possible violations and illegal actions, police said.

At least six of the Constitutional Court’s eight justices must vote to remove Mr Yoon. Otherwise, he will be reinstated. AFP

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Read Entire Article