The Korea Times

Ex-prosecutor-general to declare presidenti­al bid Tuesday

Race expected to heat up following Yoon’s declaratio­n

- By Jun Ji-hye jjh@koreatimes.co.kr

Ex-Prosecutor-General Yoon Seok-youl is set to declare his bid for the presidency next Tuesday, threatenin­g to become the leading opposition presidenti­al hopeful against a candidate from the ruling Democratic Party of Korea in the election scheduled for March next year.

“I will speak to the people about what I will do from now on,” Yoon was quoted as saying by his vice-spokeswoma­n Choi Ji-hyun, Thursday.

According to Choi, Yoon will announce his widely anticipate­d presidenti­al bid at 1 p.m. in an event to be held in Seoul’s Yun Bong-gil Memorial Hall, which commemorat­es a national independen­ce fighter.

Yoon stepped down as prosecutor-general in early March to protest the ruling party’s push to create a non-prosecutio­n body, specializi­ng in investigat­ing “serious crimes,” which would take over the investigat­ive powers of the prosecutio­n.

At the time, he had more than four months left in his two-year tenure.

Yoon’s move to declare his presidenti­al bid early is being construed as a decision to face head-on some of the rumors surroundin­g him, which could weaken his position.

Lee Dong-hoon, who had been appointed as Yoon’s spokesman, resigned abruptly, June 20, only 10 days after the appointmen­t, citing personal reasons.

This caused rumors that Lee had come into conflict with Yoon, and his resignatio­n may have been related to a so-called “Yoon Seok-youl X-file” that has recently been rattling the political circle in the run-up to next year’s presidenti­al election.

Lee Sang-rok, another spokesman for Yoon, denied this, saying, “Lee Dong-hoon’s resignatio­n was on health grounds.”

The file is rumored to contain controvers­ial secret documents, one of which was confirmed to have been created by a progressiv­e YouTuber seen by many as a pro-Moon Jae-in government figure, that put forward various allegation­s about Yoon and his family members.

On Sunday, Yoon said he was not going to respond to the rumored file, calling it a “negative campaign.”

But two days later, he started a counteratt­ack, apparently mindful of concerns that the file could deal a heavy blow to his presidenti­al bid.

Claiming that the documents in the file could have been a result of possible illegal surveillan­ce of him by government organizati­ons and the ruling party, Yoon said in a statement, Tuesday: “Those who spread false informatio­n and carried out illegal surveillan­ce should assume full responsibi­lity.”

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Yoon Seok-youl

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