There have been greater than 100 law enforcement officials and so they have been armed with a warrant, however South Korean authorities failed to arrest suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol after a six-hour impasse exterior his house.
That is how lengthy the confrontation with Yoon’s safety workforce lasted as they fashioned a human wall and used autos to dam the arrest workforce’s path, in response to native media.
It has been an unprecedented month for South Korean politics. Yoon’s surprising but short-lived martial legislation order was adopted by an impeachment vote towards him. Then got here the legal investigation, his refusal to look for questioning and, earlier this week, a warrant for his arrest.
The correct-wing chief nonetheless has a powerful assist base. Hundreds of them turned up exterior his house on Friday morning to oppose his arrest.
However, by many accounts, Yoon is now a disgraced chief impeached by parliament and suspended from workplace, he awaits the choice of the constitutional courtroom which may take away him from workplace.
So why has it confirmed so troublesome for police to arrest him?
The lads guarding the president
Though Yoon has been stripped of his presidential powers – after lawmakers voted to question him – he’s nonetheless entitled to a safety element.
And people males performed a key function in blocking the arrest on Friday.
The presidential safety service (PSS) might have acted out of loyalty to Yoon or underneath “a misguided understanding of their authorized and constitutional function”, says Mason Richey, an affiliate professor at Seoul’s Hankuk College of Overseas Research.
On condition that Yoon has been suspended, the PSS must be taking instructions from performing President Choi Sang-mok. “They’ve both not been instructed by performing President Choi to face down, or they’re refusing his orders to take action,” says Assoc Prof Richey.
Some specialists consider the safety officers have been displaying “unconditional loyalty” to Yoon, slightly than the workplace itself. They level to the truth that the PSS’s chief Park Jong-joon was appointed to the job by Yoon final September.
“It might be the case that Yoon has seeded the organisation with hardline loyalists in preparation for exactly this eventuality,” says US-based lawyer and Korea skilled Christopher Jumin Lee.
And that Park’s predecessor was former defence minister Kim Yong-hyun, who’s accused of advising Yoon to impose martial legislation. He’s presently being held for questioning as a part of the legal investigation into Yoon.
A threat of escalation
The “easiest” answer, Mr Lee says, is for performing president Choi to order the PSS to face down within the interim.
“If he’s unwilling to take action, that could be grounds for his personal impeachment by the Nationwide Meeting,” he added.
Choi, who’s the finance minister, had stepped in to steer the nation after lawmakers voted to question Yoon’s first successor, Prime Minister Han Duck-soo.
This political stalemate additionally displays the polarisation in South Korean politics between those that assist Yoon, and his choice to impose martial legislation, and people who oppose it. And the variations do not essentially finish there.
The overwhelming majority of South Koreans agree that Yoon’s declaration of martial legislation on 3 Dec was fallacious and that he must be held accountable, says Duyeon Kim, an adjunct senior fellow on the Middle for a New American Safety, however they can not agree on what accountability seems to be like.
“The actors concerned disagree over course of, process and their authorized foundation, which is including to the present political uncertainty,” she explains.
That uncertainty can also be creating tense stand-offs just like the one which unfolded on Friday in and outdoors Yoon’s presidential residence, the place his supporters have been tenting out for days, resulting in heated speeches and even skirmishes with police.
Legislation enforcement might return with extra brokers and use pressure however that might be “extremely harmful,” Assoc Prof Mason stated.
The PSS too is closely armed, so arresting officers could be seeking to keep away from any escalation.
“What occurs if the police present up with further warrants calling for the arrest of PSS personnel, [the PSS] defy these warrants as effectively after which brandish their weapons?” Mr Lee asks.
Police have now stated they’re investigating the PSS director and his deputy for obstructing them – so there may very well be extra expenses and arrest warrants coming.
The fallout from Yoon’s martial legislation order can also be a problem for the Corruption Investigation Workplace (CIO) that’s investigating him.
It has solely been working for 4 years. It was created in response to public anger over former president Park Geun-hye who was impeached, faraway from workplace and later jailed over a corruption scandal.
Whereas South Korean presidents have been jailed earlier than, Yoon is the primary one to face arrest earlier than he steps down.
Investigators have till 6 January to arrest Yoon earlier than the present warrant expires.
They could try to arrest Yoon once more over the weekend, though the weekend might pose an even bigger problem if the crowds of supporters develop. They’ll additionally apply for a brand new warrant and attempt to detain him once more.
Given how far South Korea has now slid into uncharted territory, the uncertainty is prone to proceed.
Extra reporting by Ewe Koh