South Korean president arrested, invokes right to remain silent
Yoon Suk Yeol wants to avoid bloodshed

SUPPORTERS of impeached South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol hold placards reading ‘Stop The Steal’ as they gather outside the government complex building housing the Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials in Gwacheon, South Korea on 15 January 2025, after Yoon was arrested over his failed martial law bid.
JUNG YEON-JE/Agence France-presse
SEOUL (AFP) — Impeached South Korean leader Yoon Suk Yeol was arrested on Wednesday over his failed martial law bid, ending a weeks-long standoff with authorities and becoming the first president to be detained in the nation’s history.
Yoon, who faces charges of insurrection over his short-lived effort to impose martial law last month, said he would comply with investigators to avoid “bloodshed.”
A former prosecutor who led the conservative People Power Party (PPP) to election victory in 2022, Yoon could face the death penalty or life in jail if found guilty of insurrection.
He had sought to evade arrest for weeks by remaining in his residential compound, protected by members of the Presidential Security Service (PSS) who had remained loyal to him.
His guards had installed barbed wire and barricades at the residence, turning it into what the opposition called a “fortress.”
Yoon, who had vowed to “fight to the end,” managed to thwart a first arrest attempt on 3 January following a tense hours-long impasse between the guards and anti-graft investigators working with police.
But before dawn on Wednesday, hundreds of police officers and investigators from the Corruption Investigation Office (CIO) again surrounded the residence, some scaling perimeter walls and hiking up back trails to reach the main building.
After a standoff of about five hours, authorities announced Yoon had been arrested and the impeached leader released a pre-recorded video message.
“I decided to respond to the Corruption Investigation Office,” Yoon said in the message, adding that he did not accept the legality of the investigation but was complying “to prevent any unfortunate bloodshed.”
Yoon left his residence in a convoy and was taken to the offices of the CIO.
Investigators began questioning Yoon shortly after his arrest but they said he had exercised “his right to remain silent.”
He refused to be filmed during questioning, a CIO official told reporters, adding Yoon would spend the night at a detention center.
In a later Facebook post that Yoon said he wrote while holed up in his residence, he repeated election fraud claims and spoke of “hostile” nations attacking the country, alluding to North Korea.
Agence France-Presse reporters earlier witnessed brief scuffles at the gate of the residence, where Yoon’s die-hard supporters had been camped out to protect him, as authorities first moved on the compound.
His supporters were heard chanting “illegal warrant!” while waving glow sticks and South Korean and American flags. Some lay on the ground outside the residential compound’s main gate.
