logo
South Korea's former president Yoon defies summons in martial law probe

South Korea's former president Yoon defies summons in martial law probe

Reuters20 hours ago
SEOUL, July 1 (Reuters) - Former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol skipped questioning on Tuesday by a special prosecutor investigating his December declaration of martial law, citing the need to prepare for a later hearing despite the risk of arrest.
Yoon was ousted in April by the Constitutional Court, which upheld his impeachment by parliament for a martial law bid that shocked a country that had prided itself on becoming a thriving democracy after overcoming military dictatorship in the 1980s.
Through his lawyers, Yoon, a powerful former top prosecutor elected president in 2022, has accused the special counsel of going on a politically-motivated "witch hunt," describing as illegal some of the tactics used against him.
On Monday, Yoon's lawyers said July 5 was the earliest he would be able to appear, citing a trial court hearing on insurrection charges set for Thursday that he must attend and his rights as a defendant to rest and prepare.
A spokesperson for the special prosecutor's team did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Media reported the team has said it will issue another summons for this week.
Yoon has been locked in an unprecedented wrangle with authorities over the investigation by the special counsel appointed in June, which ratcheted up prior efforts by state prosecutors and police to investigate his martial law attempt.
During Yoon's first appearance on Saturday, questioning was interrupted for several hours after he objected to procedures he said violated his rights.
The special prosecutor has said the team would consider action under the criminal code, which analysts and media say probably means an arrest, though the team did not confirm that.
Analysts and some members of Yoon's conservative People Power Party have questioned his intentions, since he was a lead prosecutor in the 2017 graft investigation and prosecution of former President Park Geun-hye.
Two other special prosecutors were appointed in June to sift accusations of wrongdoing by Yoon's wife and obstruction by the presidential office of an investigation into the death of a marine in 2023.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pregnant British teen ‘forced' to smuggle drugs into Georgia
Pregnant British teen ‘forced' to smuggle drugs into Georgia

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Pregnant British teen ‘forced' to smuggle drugs into Georgia

A pregnant British teenager has told a court she was 'forced under torture' to smuggle drugs into Georgia by a gang she encountered while on holiday in Thailand. Bella May Culley, 18, is in police custody in the former Soviet republic, accused of illegally buying, possessing and importing large quantities of narcotics, including marijuana. If found guilty, she could face life imprisonment. Culley, from Stockton-on-Tees in Co Durham, had been travelling in Asia in April and May, where she was scuba diving and partying on the islands of Palawan and Panay in the Philippines. She went missing in Pattaya in Thailand, before being arrested at Tbilisi airport, where the authorities seized 11kg of marijuana and just over 400g of hashish — a highly potent form of cannabis. At a pre-trial hearing on Tuesday, Culley, a student nurse , told Tbilisi city court that she never intended to get involved in the drug trade. 'I didn't want to do this — I was forced under torture. I was simply planning to travel. I study at university. I'm a student. I want to become a nurse. I've been tested for drugs, and nothing was found in my system — that should also be taken into account,' she told the court. Malkhaz Salakaia, for the defence, told Judge Lela Kalichenko that Culley had approached a police officer in Thailand, who turned out to be a member of the criminal gang that forced her to carry out the crime. During the hour-long hearing, Culley, who is 18 weeks pregnant, showed the court a 'snake like' scar on her right arm. She claimed it was inflicted before she was given the bag of drugs, which she denies ever touching. Salakaia told the court: 'The suitcase from Thailand to Tbilisi was moved by other individuals. She was simply handed a passport and asked to take that particular flight. They told her someone would meet her in Georgia. 'She doesn't even know where she is. Someone was supposed to meet her, but they couldn't because the customs officers found the cargo. 'From Thailand to Sharjah [in the United Arab Emirates], from Sharjah to Thailand, this baggage was carried by a different person. She was only given a passport and told you go there and there. She tried to inform the passport control but was paid no attention. She even has no idea geographically where she is. She thought Tbilisi was a country.' Culley did not enter a plea before her trial on July 10. Her defence asked for bail, telling the judge that she had never been convicted of a crime and went to Thailand with money she had 'earned through hard work'. The judge denied her request for bail, claiming there was a risk she might flee and commit another crime. Culley, who recently finished a course at Middlesbrough College, had travelled to southeast Asia twice since the start of the year. On her second trip, she partied on the islands in the Philippines, where she explored coastal caves and played with turtles, before flying to Thailand. In May, Culley's grandfather, William Culley, 80, said that she was travelling to the Philippines alone, with plans to meet a man who had moved to the country from the northeast of England. 'She went to the Philippines to see somebody, a lad there, who she used to go out with a couple of years ago, who was working out there,' he said from his detached home in Billingham in Stockton-on-Tees. 'He was working out there for his father's company or something. But now I wonder if what she told me was true.' William Culley had previously described his granddaughter as an intelligent woman who wouldn't knowingly get herself involved in drug trafficking and speculated that someone may have offered her money to take the bag to Georgia. In recent social media posts, Culley had shared a video flaunting wads of cash held together by a hairband. In one of her TikToks she referred to the American outlaw couple Bonnie and Clyde. 'How about we get up to criminal activities side by side like Bonnie n Clyde making heavy figures,' she said in the clip posted on April 1. The teenager is believed to be in Tbilisi's prison No 5, the only women's jail in the country. A Georgian government report in 2015 found the cells contained no drinking water and that prisoners were sometimes given 'big nappies' instead of sanitary products.

China building giant ‘military city' fortress ten times bigger than the Pentagon with nuclear-proof bunker ready for WW3
China building giant ‘military city' fortress ten times bigger than the Pentagon with nuclear-proof bunker ready for WW3

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

China building giant ‘military city' fortress ten times bigger than the Pentagon with nuclear-proof bunker ready for WW3

CHINA is secretly constructing a massive new military fortress ten times bigger than the Pentagon. The "Beijing Military City" is kitted with a doomsday bunker ready for WW3 and could serve as a wartime command centre, according to US intelligence. 6 6 6 The Pentagon is famously the world's largest office building - but will be dwarfed by the new facility which is more than 4km across. It occupies a sprawling site about 20 miles southwest of the capital Beijing. There is no visible military presence around the complex, but US intelligence officials believe it is designed to play a key role in China's future military endeavours. Xi Jinping is rapidly building up a nuclear arsenal which, in a decade's time, could rival that of the US. With nuclear armament comes the need for more robust protection against nukes from other nations - hence the bunker beneath the fortress. The construction of the complex was first reported by the Financial Times, with satellite pictures showing its development. In February 2022, the site was filled with residential buildings and large areas of open land in an area north of the Chonqing Reservoir. A year later, it could be seen that the site had largely been cleared out in preparation for a massive construction project - which appeared to kick off in mid-2024. By the June of that year, the site had been completely overhauled wit a new system of surrounding tunnels and roads. According to the Chinese government, the new facility does not exist. There is no official mention of the construction project, and the Chinese embassy claims no knowledge of it. But the watertight restrictions around the site suggests otherwise. Access is strictly prohibited, and all drones and cameras are banned. Hiking trails near to the site have also been erased to avoid any prying eyes. A former senior US intelligence official told the FT that the new command centre could replace China's existing military headquarters dating from the Cold War. The source said: "The size, scale, and partially buried characteristics of the new facility suggest it will replace the Western Hills complex as the primary wartime command facility." 6 6 Renny Babiarz, a former imagery analyst at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, told the paper that satellite images appeared to show about 100 cranes working away at the site. With deep underground tunnels and spaces reinforced in concrete, a China researcher told the FT that the complex had "all the hallmarks of a sensitive military facility". They said: "Nearly 10 times bigger than the Pentagon, it's fitting for Xi Jinping's ambitions to surpass the US. "This fortress only serves one purpose, which is to act as a doomsday bunker for China's increasingly sophisticated and capable military." The new base suggests that China has growing military ambitions, and aligns with the Chinese People's Liberation Army's goal to reform the military by 2027. 6

India is an enemy, not a friend or a neutral
India is an enemy, not a friend or a neutral

Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Telegraph

India is an enemy, not a friend or a neutral

Today, India commissioned a new warship, the INS Tamal. She is the latest in a line of eight Talwar-class stealth frigates. Similar in displacement and length to our own Type 23 frigate, superficially at least, she has a similar array of weapons and sensors. The one exception being the BrahMos anti-ship and land attack missile, theoretically a beast of a weapon with a range over 500 miles at speeds up to Mach 3, which would be far in excess of anything we have. But there is a problem. Tamal was built by Russia in their Yantar shipyard in Kaliningrad. For those of you who follow the Indian Navy, that they have some of their ships built by Russia will not come as news. Already an aircraft carrier, 50 per cent of their submarines and the Talwar class accounts for about 20 per cent of their fleet. Many of these programmes date back decades but of course, the international climate has changed rather a lot. India's dependence on Russia for warships is at least reducing, but should it not already be close to zero? Meanwhile, India's trade in Russian oil reeks of duplicity. Despite Western sanctions, India's refiners guzzle discounted crude, often shipped by dark fleet vessels dodging and falsifying their AIS tracking. By actively engaging with this trade, New Delhi flouts global rules, reaping economic rewards while feigning neutrality. The government's coy silence on sanctioned oil flowing through Indian ports betrays a calculated dodge of accountability, undermining efforts to choke Russia's war chest. India is financing Putin's atrocities. Dark fleet ships thrive with India's tacit aid. Russian insurers secured New Delhi's nod in April 2025 to cover tankers shunned by Western firms. This greenlights sanctioned oil deliveries, breaching the G7's $60-per-barrel cap. India's lack of oversight lets these old and poorly maintained ghost ships flood its ports, with Russian crude imports hitting a 10-month peak in May. Meanwhile President Modi surveys all with eyes and mouth firmly closed. His Moscow visits in 2024–2025 saw dark fleet deals, only curbed after US prodding this January. Modi's refusal to address insurance loopholes or vessel opacity shows a man who doesn't care about right and wrong, only money. He is quite willing to finance Putin if it means cheaper oil: in this, he is an enemy of the West, not a friend and not a neutral. Militarily the dependence on Russian equipment doesn't make much sense either. We are increasingly seeing how poor some Russian kit is. I suggested that the BrahMos was an impressive missile system earlier and, on paper at least, it is. But manufacturers' brochures and warfighting reality can be very different things. Putin's supposedly unstoppable Kinzhal and Zircon weapons have both proven to be very stoppable using American made interceptors, and by no means their best ones either. To give another example, I sailed up the Elbe in company with the Tamal's sister ship, the INS Teg, on her maiden voyage back in 2012. It was very clear from my position 100 yards astern of her that she was unable to maintain the ordered speed of six knots required to keep formation. It was clear because every time she pulsed one engine to try and do so, huge plumes of black smoke belched out of her funnels and onto nearby sailing vessels. Speaking to one of her senior officers once alongside it became clear that 10 knots was her minimum sustainable speed (using just one engine) and that they had had to place sentries all the way up the funnels such was the risk of fire from the build-up of soot as they tried to move slower than that. Maybe she was running on a tank of Russian oil just to add insult to injury, I don't know. The point is, either by design incompetence, or political interference leading to the same, India had acquired a ship that was unable to move slowly through the water. This will never appear on a brochure but practically, of course, it is a serious problem: an anti-submarine frigate that cannot move slowly and quietly is not a great deal of use. Another problem is choosing a country currently that is at war to service your systems and parts. The contract to deliver the S-400 air defence units is seemingly going ahead despite the number of missiles Russia has burned through defending against Ukrainian counterattacks. And this before we get to how much less effective the S-400 has been in real life compared to the claims. Tanks, rifles, fighter jets and nuclear submarines can be added to missiles and ships on a list that looks set to endure for decades. In sum, Indian dependence on Russian weapons is slowly reducing but it could not be clearer that this isn't from any desire to do the right thing. New Delhi's unhelpful practices around illegal Russian oil are rapidly increasing. And, speaking to a recently retired senior official this morning, India's neighbours get the same message – it's India first and the rest of you be damned. Soon India is going to have to choose a side, or we're going to have to treat them the way they're basically treating us: as an enemy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store