City
Epaper

Yoon ordered arrest of key politicians after declaring martial law

By IANS | Updated: December 7, 2024 06:40 IST

Seoul, Dec 7 South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol had ordered the arrest of prominent lawmakers of the ...

Open in App

Seoul, Dec 7 South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol had ordered the arrest of prominent lawmakers of the ruling and main opposition parties, shortly after he declared martial law earlier this week, a top intelligence official told a lawmaker.

Hong Jang-won, first deputy director of South Korea's National Intelligence Service (NIS), made the remark on Friday during his talks with Representative Shin Sung-bum, chair of the intelligence committee, at the National Assembly earlier in the day, Representative Kim

Included in the list were DP leader Lee Jae-myung, ruling party leader Han Dong-hoon, National Assembly Speaker Woo Won-Shik, DP floor leader Park Chan-dae, Representative Cho Kuk of the minor opposition Korea Rebuilding Party and other politicians, Yonhap news agency reported.

Hong claimed Yoon made a phone call late Tuesday and ordered him to "take this opportunity to take them all in and get rid of them".

Hong said he called Counterintelligence Commander Yeo In-hyung to deliver Yoon's instructions.

Hong also said he submitted a letter of resignation after hearing from NIS Director Cho Tae-yong that Yoon had ordered Hong to be sacked on Thursday, but Cho rejected it the following morning.

Meanwhile, Cho claimed he received no direct orders from Yoon about arresting any politicians, nor were there any talks about dismissing Hong either from the President or the presidential office.

A document submitted by the police agency to the DP, meanwhile, revealed that Yeo had asked Cho Ji-ho, the head of the Korean National Police Agency, to check the locations of major political figures during their phone calls immediately after the declaration of martial law on Tuesday.

The police agency said that its chief, however, did not take any action as it required a legal review.

During the phone call, Yeo also mentioned that a joint investigation headquarters could be set up, in which case he would ask the police for support, and that he planned to head to the National Election Commission.

The National Assembly's intelligence committee plans to hold an emergency meeting on Saturday to question the NIS director and other key spy officials on the martial law declaration.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentLauren Gottlieb talks about the ‘biggest lesson’ she learnt in Bollywood

NationalUttarakhand Helicopter Crash: 4 Tourists Killed, Two Injured As Chopper Crashes Near Uttarkashi Forest

TechnologySensex, Nifty open nearly flat as geopolitical tensions continue

BusinessSensex, Nifty open nearly flat as geopolitical tensions continue

EntertainmentAriel Winter’s self-esteem was ‘damaged’ after she was body-shamed as teen actress

International Realted Stories

International"Its all over social media": Pakistan Defence Minister fails to justify claim of downing Indian jets

International14 Pakistani soldiers killed in twin Baloch Liberation Army attacks

InternationalLahore rocked by explosion near military airport at Walton Road

InternationalIran FM Araghchi arrives in Delhi amid growing India-Pak tensions

InternationalOperation Sindoor impact: Rattled Shehbaz Sharif says will take this war to the end