South Korea: New Martial Law Rules After Political Crisis
7 Articles
7 Articles
South Korea amends martial law rules: No entry for army, police into parliament; lawmakers can’t be stopped
South Korea’s parliament approved on Thursday a revision to rules governing martial law, in a move that comes after the country was shocked by former President Yoon Suk Yeol’s sudden declaration of martial law in December.
Ex-Presidential Security Service deputy chief appears for special counsel questioning in martial law probe
Kim Seong-hoon, former deputy chief of the Presidential Security Service (PSS), appeared before a special counsel team Thursday to undergo questioning in connection with former President Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law bid. Kim arrived at the office of special counsel Cho Eun-suk as the team looks into allegations Yoon ordered the PSS to block investigators from executing a warrant to detain him in early January. The special counsel team has also be…
(Seoul = Yonhap News) Reporters Lee Bo-bae, Kim Da-hye, and Kwon Hee-won = The special prosecutor team investigating the internal rebellion and foreign exchange incidents related to the '12/3 martial law' on the 3rd...
Yoon Seok-yeol & Martial Law Council Omission: 6 Unnotified Individuals
Yoon Seok-yeol Faces Scrutiny as Prosecutors Rebuild Timeline of Emergency Martial Law declaration Prosecutors are intensifying… The post Yoon Seok-yeol & Martial Law Council Omission: 6 Unnotified Individuals appeared first on TIme News.
South Korean lawmakers support amendment to martial law - ban preventing MPs from entering the National Assembly
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