South Korea’s top court upholds prison term for former president Yoon in martial law case

WorldPolitics
9 Jul 2026 • 4:45 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

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South Korea’s top court upholds prison term for former president Yoon in martial law case

South Korea’s Supreme Court on Thursday upheld a seven-year prison sentence for Yoon Suk Yeol in the first case to reach the highest court from the several criminal trials related to the former leader’s brief imposition of martial law in 2024.

The court upheld an April ruling by the Seoul High Court that found Yoon guilty of infringing on cabinet members’ right to deliberate before he declared martial law, falsifying the official proclamation to cover up the lapse before destroying the document, and deploying presidential security forces to resist law enforcement efforts to arrest him weeks after his impeachment.

Martial law lasted only hours before lawmakers broke through a blockade of heavily armed soldiers and police at Seoul’s National Assembly and voted to repeal it, forcing Yoon’s cabinet to lift the measure.

Yoon, who remains in detention, did not attend the ruling, which is final. He is still standing trial in other cases, and he has appealed the life sentence he received for the most serious conviction against him, on the charge of rebellion.

In a statement, Yoon’s legal team expressed “deep regret” over the Supreme Court’s ruling, saying the justices concluded a significant case without sufficient review.

A TV screen showing a news report about the sentencing trial of South Korea’s former president Yoon Suk Yeol in the insurrection case (Reuters)

The ruling aligned with the views of the Constitutional Court, which, in removing Yoon from office in April 2025, found his martial law decree lacked a legal basis and failed to follow required procedures.

Yoon called 11 cabinet members to his office shortly before declaring martial law late at night television on 3 December 2024. Several participants, including then prime minister Han Duck-soo, later testified that the president unilaterally informed them of his decision rather than inviting deliberation.

The Seoul High Court had said Yoon also violated the rights of nine other cabinet members by failing to call them to the meeting or notifying them too late.

Though brief, Yoon’s martial law declaration plunged South Korea into a political crisis, paralysing politics and high-level diplomacy while rattling financial markets. The turmoil eased only after his liberal rival, Lee Jae Myung, won an early presidential election in June 2025.

In addition to appealing his life sentence for rebellion, Yoon is appealing a 30-year prison term in a case accusing him of ordering drone flights in 2024 to deliberately heighten tensions with North Korea and create justifiable conditions for martial law at home.

Yoon’s lawyers said the drone flights were a response to North Korea flying thousands of trash-carrying balloons into the South.

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