A South Korean court has sentenced former president Yoon Suk Yeol to life in prison after he imposed martial law in the country in 2024.
He was found guilty of abuse of authority and masterminding an insurrection through his mobilisation of military and police forces in an illegal attempt to seize the liberal-led National Assembly in December 2024.
The martial law lasted for around six hours, before being lifted after politicians managed to break through a blockade by hundreds of heavily-armed troops and police, unanimously voting to lift the measure.
Prosecutors sought the death penalty in January, saying “his unconstitutional and illegal emergency martial law undermined the function of the National Assembly and the Election Commission actually destroying the liberal democratic constitutional order.”
The court also convicted and sentenced several former military and police officials involved in enforcing the martial law decree.
Former defence minister Kim Yong Hyun also received a 30-year jail term for his central role in planning the measure and mobilising the military.
Yoon was sentenced last month to five years in prison for resisting arrest, fabricating the martial law proclamation and sidestepping a legally mandated full cabinet meeting before he declared martial law.
The Seoul Central Court has also convicted two of Yoon’s cabinet members in other cases, including former prime minister Han Duck-soo, who received a 23-year prison sentence for attempting to legitimise the decree by forcing it through a cabinet council meeting, falsifying records and lying under oath.




















