Heavy police presence secures Seoul court amid clashing pro- and anti-Yoon rallies before insurrection verdict.
Heavy police presence secures Seoul court amid clashing pro- and anti-Yoon rallies before insurrection verdict.
Image générée par IA

Tight security in Seoul as Yoon awaits first verdict on 2024 martial law insurrection charges

Image générée par IA

Police have bolstered security around Seoul's Central District Court amid rallies by supporters and critics of former President Yoon Suk Yeol ahead of the first verdict in his insurrection trial on February 19, 2026. Special prosecutors recommended the death penalty for his short-lived 2024 martial law declaration, with the ruling set for 3 p.m.

SEOUL, Feb. 19 -- Security has been significantly tightened around Seoul's Central District Court on February 19, 2026, ahead of the first-instance verdict in former President Yoon Suk Yeol's trial for leading an insurrection through his December 3, 2024, martial law declaration. The measure lasted six hours and involved mobilizing troops to seal the National Assembly and ordering arrests of key political figures.

Special prosecutors, led by Cho Eun-suk, indicted Yoon in January 2025 alongside former Defense Minister Kim Yong-hyun and others, accusing them of conspiring to subvert the Constitution. In the final hearing last month, prosecutors sought the death penalty, arguing Yoon aimed to retain power by seizing the judiciary and legislature using military resources.

Yoon maintains his innocence, claiming the declaration was a constitutional effort to safeguard freedom, sovereignty, and order, not a military dictatorship.

The court, which previously deemed the martial law bid an insurrection in related trials, is expected to impose a heavy sentence. Proceedings will be broadcast live, with Yoon attending from detention. Verdicts will also cover seven co-defendants, including Kim, former National Police Agency chief Cho Ji-ho, and former Seoul police chief Kim Bong-sik. Yoon faces a separate five-year sentence for obstructing investigators.

Tensions are high outside the southern Seoul court, where about 80 Yoon supporters rallied overnight for acquittal. Far-right groups like Freedom Union plan a 2,300-person rally from 9 a.m. Progressive Candlelight Action expects 5,000 at nearby Seocho Station from 2 p.m. calling for conviction. Banners proclaim 'The insurrection has not ended even after a year.'

To avert violence, reminiscent of a prior supporter riot at another court, police deployed 1,000 officers, barriers of buses, and restricted access since last Friday to pre-registered vehicles and press via the east gate only.

The courtroom hosted former President Chun Doo-hwan's 1996 death sentence for a coup and Gwangju events; South Korea's last execution was in 1997.

Ce que les gens disent

X discussions on Yoon Suk Yeol's first verdict in the 2024 martial law insurrection trial are highly polarized. Yoon supporters view the proceedings as a leftist political witch hunt, portraying his actions as a necessary defense against radicals and election fraud, with calls for 'Yoon Again' and rallies demanding his release. Critics demand the death penalty, labeling it a coup attempt and organizing candlelight protests for severe punishment. Journalists and news accounts report on tight security, supporter and critic gatherings around Seoul's Central District Court, and live updates ahead of the 3 p.m. ruling.

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Courtroom scene of ex-President Yoon Suk Yeol sentenced to life imprisonment for 2024 insurrection in Seoul.
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Seoul court sentences ex-President Yoon to life for leading 2024 insurrection

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The Seoul Central District Court on February 19, 2026, sentenced former President Yoon Suk Yeol to life imprisonment for leading an insurrection through his failed December 3, 2024, martial law declaration. This first ruling deemed the bid an attempt to paralyze the National Assembly, opting for life over the death penalty sought by prosecutors due to incomplete planning and limited force.

Five days after his life sentence for the 2024 martial law-linked insurrection, former President Yoon Suk Yeol appealed the ruling on February 24, 2026. His lawyers cited factual errors, legal misapplications, and political bias, vowing to challenge the verdict for historical accuracy amid ongoing political fallout in South Korea.

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The Seoul Central District Court approved live broadcast of former President Yoon Suk Yeol's sentencing trial for leading an insurrection via his December 3, 2024 martial law declaration. The February 19 hearing follows recent proceedings, including former PM Han Duck-soo's January sentencing and Yoon's prior televised prison term ruling.

The former chief of South Korea's Drone Operations Command was removed from office on Thursday for his role in the botched martial law imposition of late 2024. The defense ministry took this severe disciplinary action against Maj. Gen. Kim Yong-dae, who is accused of dispatching drones to North Korea in October 2024 on orders from former President Yoon Suk Yeol and former Defense Minister Kim Yong-hyun.

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President Lee Jae-myung stressed the importance of defending democracy at the 66th anniversary of the April 19 Revolution. Speaking at the April 19th National Cemetery in northern Seoul, he compared the 1960 people's resistance to former President Yoon Suk-yeol's 2024 martial law attempt, saying the public's outcry toppled an arrogant regime. He urged safeguarding democracy against anti-democratic forces.

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