South Korea investigators ask police to arrest Yoon

Yoon may face prison or the death penalty if he is detained after briefly suspending civil law and sending South Korea into its worst political crisis in years, but both he and his followers have remained angry.

” The National Security Service may protect the president, and we will defend the Presidential Security Service till midnight”, said Kim Soo-yong, 62, one of the opposition organisers.

” If they get another permit, we did arrive again”.

In front of his national mansion, lots of Yoon’s People Power Party politicians showed up in the clouds of dawn.

As lots of protesters and supporters of Yoon from the previous evening braved sub-zero circumstances immediately, authorities decided to block streets in anticipation of another day of protests.

” I’ve been around long than the CIO right now. It doesn’t make feeling why they didn’t do it. They need to assault him immediately”, anti-Yoon opposition administrator Kim Ah-young, in her 30s, said.

The first warrant was issued on the grounds that Yoon has refused to come forward for questioning over his martial law order.

His lawyers have repeatedly said the permit is “unlawful” and “illegal”, pledging to get more legal actions against it.

The president’s security service’s head furthermore stated on Sunday that he would not permit police to apprehend the leader who had been suspended.

However, the radiant East Asian democracy will either be arrested or detained without consent from the court. The sitting president will either have been arrested or evaded detention.