South Korea Court Sentences Ousted President Yoon Suk Yeol to 7 Years for Martial Law Power-Grab

An appeals court in South Korea has sentenced ousted President Yoon Suk Yeol to seven years in prison for resisting arrest and bypassing a Cabinet meeting before his brief imposition of martial law in December 2024 — the most consequential ruling yet in a saga that has dominated Korean politics for 16 months.

The Charges That Stuck

  • Resisting arrest during the post-impeachment investigation period
  • Bypassing the Cabinet in the chain of constitutional process before declaring martial law
  • Procedural violations associated with the December 2024 emergency declaration

The Ruling

The appeals court upheld the lower-court conviction and lengthened the sentence — explicitly citing the gravity of using emergency powers to circumvent constitutional checks. The decision is a strong signal that Korean institutions will treat extraconstitutional action by a sitting president as a criminal matter, regardless of the duration.

Wider Fallout

  • Yoon’s wife had her own prison sentence extended in late April
  • The successor administration has used the case to push through reform of presidential emergency powers
  • Conservative bloc leadership has been in upheaval since the original martial-law episode

Why It Matters Globally

The case is the highest-profile prosecution of a sitting/former president in democratic Asia in a generation. Foreign chanceries — particularly Tokyo and Washington — are tracking implications for South Korean political stability and security cooperation.

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