Ousted president of South Korea mounts underwear protest

Former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol is resisting interrogation by special counsel investigators by lying down in his underwear and refusing to cooperate. The investigators attempted to question Yoon under an arrest warrant related to influence-peddling allegations. During the process, Yoon removed most of his clothing and resisted detention, leading officials to temporarily suspend enforcement of the warrant due to safety concerns. Yoon’s attorney criticized the public focus on his clothing as an attempt to humiliate the former president, especially given the high temperatures in the detention facility. Yoon was initially arrested in january after a failed attempt to impose martial law, released in March due to procedural issues, but rearrested soon after amid concerns he might destroy evidence. He was impeached and suspended in December, with the Constitutional Court later upholding his impeachment. The article also mentions a separate economic deal between South korea and the U.S. involving tariff reductions and significant investments.


Ousted South Korea president protests interrogation by laying flat in his underwear, refusing to move

Former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol is refusing to cooperate with investigators by taking off his clothes and refusing to move.

Special counsel investigators, fulfilling an arrest warrant on allegations of influence-peddling by Yoon, attempted to coax the former leader into voluntary questioning on Friday.

“Without wearing his prison uniform, the suspect lay down on the floor and strongly resisted his detention,” said assistant special counsel Oh Jeong-hee in a video briefing.

Former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, center, arrives at a court to attend a hearing to review his arrest warrant requested by special prosecutors in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, July 9, 2025. (Kim Hong-Ji/Pool Photo via AP)

“Due to concerns over safety incidents, physical force was withheld, and the execution of the warrant was temporarily suspended,” she added.

Justice Minister Jung Sung-ho also told lawmakers that Yoon stripped down to his undershirt and underwear while refusing questioning, then dressed himself in the prison uniform after they relented.

Yoon’s attorney, Yu Jeong-hwa, rebuked the officials’ comments, saying that they were unfairly scrutinizing the former president’s clothing choice in a hot facility as an attempt to attack his dignity.

“The special counsel turned what should have been a press briefing into a stage for personal humiliation,” Yoon’s lawyer Yoo Jeong-hwa told Agence France-Presse.

“What kind of legal institution in a civilized country gives a real-time report and commentary to journalists on a detainee’s clothing, especially in a cramped cell nearing 40 degrees [Celsius] [104 degrees Fahrenheit]?” the attorney added.

Yoon was arrested in January following his failed attempt to impose martial law on the nation. He was released in March on a technicality after the Seoul Central District Court found the agency that detained him had no authority to investigate insurrection.

The former president was rearrested last month, with special prosecutor Cho Eun-suk claiming that he could attempt to destroy evidence in the case.

During his brief martial law period, Yoon threatened to arrest his political opponents, whom he claimed were “anti-state” actors and North Korean sympathizers.

He was impeached and suspended from office in December, and the Constitutional Court of South Korea upheld his impeachment in April.

South Korea struck a $450 billion deal with President Donald Trump on Wednesday to “buy down” U.S. tariffs from 25% to 15%.

TRUMP ANNOUNCES $450 BILLION DEAL WITH SOUTH KOREA TO ‘BUY DOWN’ US-IMPOSED TARIFFS

The East Asian country is giving the United States $350 billion “for Investments owned and controlled by the United States” and will buy an additional $100 billion of U.S. energy products.

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung says the deal “will play a role in facilitating the active entry of Korean companies into the U.S. market in industries where we have strengths, such as shipbuilding, semiconductors, secondary batteries, biotechnology, and energy.”


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