<p>Seoul: Yoon Suk Yeol became the first incumbent South Korean president to be <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/world/south-koreas-impeached-president-yoon-arrested-by-investigators-3355798">arrested</a> when he finally backed down on Wednesday in a weeks-long standoff with authorities investigating him over alleged insurrection.</p><p>A tough political survivor who became increasingly isolated halfway through his five-year term, Yoon, 64, has been dogged by personal scandals, an unyielding opposition and rifts within his own party.</p><p>His legal peril stands in contrast to his storied career before politics as a top prosecutor, which launched him into the public eye and sparked much of the support that lead to his victory in the 2022 presidential election, his first elected office.</p><p>Since narrowly winning that election, Yoon had become embittered by continual battles that have drawn out a recklessness that a former rival said is his defining trait.</p><p>By the time Yoon briefly imposed martial law on Dec. 3 in a move that stunned South Koreans, he was badly bruised politically. He was suspended from his duties after being impeached by parliament on Dec. 14 for his martial law attempt.</p><p>Yoon's political fate is in the hands of the Constitutional Court as his legal perils mount.</p><p>He faces multiple criminal investigations for insurrection - the only charge that South Korean presidents are not immune from - including one lead by the Corruption Investigation Office for High-Ranking Officials (CIO).</p><p>Yoon had used his refusal to comply with what he called the CIO's illegal arrest warrant to rally supporters in the face of snowballing legal and political troubles.</p><p>Isolated in his fortified residence in downtown Seoul, Yoon and his Presidential Security Service played a high-stakes game of chicken with authorities who tried to arrest him for two weeks before he finally agreed to appear for questioning.</p><p>In a message released as he was being arrested, Yoon said he was not acknowledging the illegal process, but was submitting to avoid bloodshed.</p><p>Yoon had earlier vowed to "fight until the end" and called on followers to help him save the country from "anti-state forces".</p> .Explained | What you need to know about the arrest of South Korea's Yoon.<p><strong>Scandals, threat of prosecution, 'American Pie'</strong></p>.<p>The past year of Yoon's presidency has been overshadowed by a scandal involving his wife, who was accused of inappropriately accepting a pricey Christian Dior handbag as a gift.</p><p>Yoon apologised after the scandal was blamed as a major reason for a crushing parliamentary election defeat the PPP suffered in April. But he continued to reject calls for a probe into the scandal and into an allegation of stock price manipulation involving his wife and her mother.</p><p>The prosecutors office that investigated the allegations decided not to press charges against the first lady.</p><p>Yoon's struggles at home have overshadowed the relative success he has had on the international stage.</p><p>His bold push to reverse a decades-long diplomatic row with neighbouring Japan and join Tokyo in a three-way security cooperation with the United States are widely seen as his signature foreign policy achievement.</p><p>Yoon's ability to bond on a personal level, seen as the trait that gave him his early success, was on full display at a White House event in 2023, when he took the stage and belted out the 1970s pop hit <em>American Pie</em> for an astounded President Joe Biden and a delighted crowd.</p>.<p><strong>Shamans, high school buddies</strong></p><p>Born into an affluent family in Seoul, Yoon initially excelled at school. He entered the elite Seoul National University to study law, but a penchant for partying led him to repeatedly fail the bar exam before passing on the ninth try.</p><p>Yoon shot to national fame in 2016 when, as the chief investigator probing then-President Park Geun-hye for corruption, he was asked if he was out for revenge and responded that prosecutors were not gangsters.</p><p>Three years earlier, Park suspended Yoon, then fired him from a team investigating a high-profile case against the nation's spy agency. That move was widely considered punishment for challenging her authority.</p><p>The role he played in jailing Park and his dramatic comeback as head of the powerful Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office marked the start of a dizzying rise to power.</p><p>Two years later, he became South Korea's prosecutor general, spearheading a corruption probe of a close ally to the next president, Moon Jae-in. That made him a darling of conservatives frustrated with Moon's liberal policies, setting Yoon up to be a candidate for the presidency in 2022.</p><p>But his presidency got off to a rocky start when he pushed ahead with moving the presidential office out of the Blue House compound to a new site, sparking questions whether it was because of a feng shui belief that the old presidential compound was cursed. Yoon denied any involvement by him or his wife with a shaman.</p><p>When Yoon refused to fire top officials after a 2022 Halloween crowd crush killed 159 people, he was accused of protecting his "yes men". One was Safety Minister Lee Sang-min, a fellow graduate of Yoon's high school.</p><p>Another alumnus of the Choongam High School in Seoul was Kim Yong-hyun, the man who spearheaded the presidential office move, became the presidential security service chief and then was appointed defence minister in September.</p><p>Kim was one of the two people who recommended that Yoon declare martial law, a senior military official said. Lee was the other. </p>
<p>Seoul: Yoon Suk Yeol became the first incumbent South Korean president to be <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/world/south-koreas-impeached-president-yoon-arrested-by-investigators-3355798">arrested</a> when he finally backed down on Wednesday in a weeks-long standoff with authorities investigating him over alleged insurrection.</p><p>A tough political survivor who became increasingly isolated halfway through his five-year term, Yoon, 64, has been dogged by personal scandals, an unyielding opposition and rifts within his own party.</p><p>His legal peril stands in contrast to his storied career before politics as a top prosecutor, which launched him into the public eye and sparked much of the support that lead to his victory in the 2022 presidential election, his first elected office.</p><p>Since narrowly winning that election, Yoon had become embittered by continual battles that have drawn out a recklessness that a former rival said is his defining trait.</p><p>By the time Yoon briefly imposed martial law on Dec. 3 in a move that stunned South Koreans, he was badly bruised politically. He was suspended from his duties after being impeached by parliament on Dec. 14 for his martial law attempt.</p><p>Yoon's political fate is in the hands of the Constitutional Court as his legal perils mount.</p><p>He faces multiple criminal investigations for insurrection - the only charge that South Korean presidents are not immune from - including one lead by the Corruption Investigation Office for High-Ranking Officials (CIO).</p><p>Yoon had used his refusal to comply with what he called the CIO's illegal arrest warrant to rally supporters in the face of snowballing legal and political troubles.</p><p>Isolated in his fortified residence in downtown Seoul, Yoon and his Presidential Security Service played a high-stakes game of chicken with authorities who tried to arrest him for two weeks before he finally agreed to appear for questioning.</p><p>In a message released as he was being arrested, Yoon said he was not acknowledging the illegal process, but was submitting to avoid bloodshed.</p><p>Yoon had earlier vowed to "fight until the end" and called on followers to help him save the country from "anti-state forces".</p> .Explained | What you need to know about the arrest of South Korea's Yoon.<p><strong>Scandals, threat of prosecution, 'American Pie'</strong></p>.<p>The past year of Yoon's presidency has been overshadowed by a scandal involving his wife, who was accused of inappropriately accepting a pricey Christian Dior handbag as a gift.</p><p>Yoon apologised after the scandal was blamed as a major reason for a crushing parliamentary election defeat the PPP suffered in April. But he continued to reject calls for a probe into the scandal and into an allegation of stock price manipulation involving his wife and her mother.</p><p>The prosecutors office that investigated the allegations decided not to press charges against the first lady.</p><p>Yoon's struggles at home have overshadowed the relative success he has had on the international stage.</p><p>His bold push to reverse a decades-long diplomatic row with neighbouring Japan and join Tokyo in a three-way security cooperation with the United States are widely seen as his signature foreign policy achievement.</p><p>Yoon's ability to bond on a personal level, seen as the trait that gave him his early success, was on full display at a White House event in 2023, when he took the stage and belted out the 1970s pop hit <em>American Pie</em> for an astounded President Joe Biden and a delighted crowd.</p>.<p><strong>Shamans, high school buddies</strong></p><p>Born into an affluent family in Seoul, Yoon initially excelled at school. He entered the elite Seoul National University to study law, but a penchant for partying led him to repeatedly fail the bar exam before passing on the ninth try.</p><p>Yoon shot to national fame in 2016 when, as the chief investigator probing then-President Park Geun-hye for corruption, he was asked if he was out for revenge and responded that prosecutors were not gangsters.</p><p>Three years earlier, Park suspended Yoon, then fired him from a team investigating a high-profile case against the nation's spy agency. That move was widely considered punishment for challenging her authority.</p><p>The role he played in jailing Park and his dramatic comeback as head of the powerful Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office marked the start of a dizzying rise to power.</p><p>Two years later, he became South Korea's prosecutor general, spearheading a corruption probe of a close ally to the next president, Moon Jae-in. That made him a darling of conservatives frustrated with Moon's liberal policies, setting Yoon up to be a candidate for the presidency in 2022.</p><p>But his presidency got off to a rocky start when he pushed ahead with moving the presidential office out of the Blue House compound to a new site, sparking questions whether it was because of a feng shui belief that the old presidential compound was cursed. Yoon denied any involvement by him or his wife with a shaman.</p><p>When Yoon refused to fire top officials after a 2022 Halloween crowd crush killed 159 people, he was accused of protecting his "yes men". One was Safety Minister Lee Sang-min, a fellow graduate of Yoon's high school.</p><p>Another alumnus of the Choongam High School in Seoul was Kim Yong-hyun, the man who spearheaded the presidential office move, became the presidential security service chief and then was appointed defence minister in September.</p><p>Kim was one of the two people who recommended that Yoon declare martial law, a senior military official said. Lee was the other. </p>