Head of the Presidential Security Service (PSS) Park Chong-jun arrives outside the National Office of Investigation in Seoul on Jan 10, 2025. (Photo: AFP/Yonhap)

South Korea presidential security chief warns against violent attempt to arrest Yoon

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SEOUL: South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol's security chief said on Friday (Jan 10) the impeached leader, who faces arrest over a criminal probe into his Dec 3 martial law bid, has been unfairly treated for a sitting leader and warned bloodshed must be avoided.

Park Chong-jun, head of the Presidential Security Service (PSS), is himself under investigation for obstructing official duty related to a six-hour standoff last week between PSS agents and investigators trying to execute an arrest warrant for Yoon.

Arriving at police headquarters for questioning, Park, who is a former senior police official, said the current attempt to arrest a sitting president is wrong and Yoon deserved treatment "becoming of" the country's status.

"I believe there should not be any physical clash or bloodshed under any circumstances," Park told reporters, adding acting President Choi Sang-mok has not responded to his request for safety assurances for officials involved.

Security guards stand outside the official residence of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol in Seoul, South Korea on Jan 10, 2025. (Photo: Reuters/Tyrone Siu)
Supporters of impeached South Korea president Yoon Suk Yeol warm themselves as they sit on a pavement with a long thermal blanket, during a rally near his residence in Seoul on Jan 8, 2025. (Photo: AFP/Anthony Wallace)

Hundreds of PSS agents blockaded the presidential compound and thwarted investigators from trying to arrest Yoon. The investigators were pulled back because of the risk of a clash.

Officials of the Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials (CIO), which is leading the investigation, have said PSS agents were carrying firearms during the standoff although no weapons were drawn.

The investigators obtained a new arrest warrant this week after Yoon defied repeated summons to appear for questioning.

On Thursday, lawyers for Yoon said the arrest warrant was illegal and invalid.

Yoon is under a separate Constitutional Court trial reviewing parliament's impeachment of him on Dec 14 to decide whether to remove him from office permanently or reinstate him. His lawyers have said Yoon will accept that verdict.

As Yoon awaits his fate, holed up inside his hillside residence, polls released this week showed a revival of support for his ruling People Power Party (PPP) and calls for his permanent removal slipping.

A Gallup Korea survey published on Friday showed 64 per cent of respondents back Yoon's removal from office, compared to 75 per cent who favoured it soon after the martial law declaration.

The PPP's approval rating rose to 34 per cent, a level similar to the period before Dec 3, in the poll of 1,004 people this week, from 24 per cent about a month ago.

Analysts said the prolonged uncertainty over Yoon's fate has not only emboldened his supporters but softened some critics concerned that the liberal opposition Democratic Party leader, who is himself on trial on allegations of criminal wrongdoings, may become president.

Source: Reuters/zl/fh

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