
South Korea’s Constitutional Court is set to rule on the impeachment of Yoon
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea’s Constitutional Court is set to rule Friday on the impeachment of President Yoon Suk Yeol, either removing him from office or restoring his powers four months after the conservative leader threw the country into turmoil with an ill-fated declaration of martial law.
The court was scheduled to issue its verdict in a nationally televised session to begin at 11 a.m. A ruling to uphold parliament’s impeachment and remove Yoon from office requires the support of at least six of the court’s eight justices.
If the court orders Yoon removed, South Korea must hold a new presidential election within two months. If the court overturns his impeachment, Yoon will immediately return to presidential duties.
Facing worries of potential violence after the ruling, police deployed crowd-control measures to their fullest extent. By Friday morning, they created an airtight maze of portable walls, folding fences, fiberglass barricades, and hundreds of buses and vehicles — some of their wheels were tied together with ropes to prevent protesters from moving them — to seal off nearly every road and alley leading to the court. Officers guarded the narrow gaps between vehicles and barricades, directing pedestrians through designated channels, checking IDs, and instructing them to walk only in a straight direction.