South Korean Standoff Over Yoon’s Arrest Risks Violent Turn

(Bloomberg) -- South Korea’s impeached leader is barricaded in his Seoul residence, protected by a blockade of buses, barbed wire, crowds of supporters and his own armed security guards. The question now is whether investigators can arrest him without a violent confrontation.

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Senior leaders of the Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials are mulling just how to peacefully bring President Yoon Suk Yeol into custody, five days after they gave up on their first try to haul him in for questioning over his failed bid to impose martial law last month.

The longer the standoff lasts, the more doubt will be cast over the ability of the CIO to carry out its probe into the president. Yoon is under investigation following his brief imposition of martial law last month, a move that blindsided the nation and its allies, whipsawed markets and hit growth expectations for Asia’s fourth-largest economy.

Still, a rushed effort to haul in Yoon that leads to violence could shake confidence in South Korea’s ability to deal with its biggest constitutional crisis in decades, just days after Secretary of State Antony Blinken lauded Seoul for its peaceful and lawful response to the political turmoil.

“It will have a catastrophic impact on the country if it’s shown you can defy an investigative agency with a legitimate court-issued warrant,” lawmaker Chun Ha-ram of minor Reform Party said in a radio interview with South Korean broadcaster CBS. “Even more troubling would be showing that you can resist with physical force through the possession of weapons.”

A handful of fatalities during the impeachment of former President Park Geun-hye occurred amid confrontations between members of the public and police. The latest flashpoint pitting investigators and police against the presidential guard over the arrest of a sitting leader is unprecedented in South Korea.

Yoon’s representatives say the arrest warrant is invalid and illegal because the CIO has no legal authority to investigate insurrection charges and arbitrarily chose a judge in a different district to improve its chances of obtaining it.

The president will comply only if he is formally indicted or if a more extensive form of arrest warrant is issued, his lawyer Yoon Kap-keun said in a televised briefing Wednesday. The current warrant is for detention of up to 48 hours. The warrant cited by the lawyer was for detention of up to 20 days.