Rio Times · Analysis
Key Facts
—Seoul South Korea’s Supreme Court upheld Yoon Suk-yeol’s seven-year prison sentence for his 2024 martial-law bid.
—Peru Four former Peruvian presidents are currently serving time in Lima’s Barbadillo prison, with a fifth facing decades more.
—Brazil Jair Bolsonaro was sentenced to 27 years for plotting a coup after his 2022 election defeat.
—Colombia Álvaro Uribe was sentenced to 12 years of house arrest for procedural fraud and witness tampering.
—Ecuador Rafael Correa remains in exile in Belgium after being convicted in a bribery case.
—The gap North Korea’s Kim Jong Un and Cameroon’s Paul Biya show how unevenly accountability is still applied.
*From Seoul to São Paulo, the world’s courts delivered the same blunt verdict this week: no president is above the law any more — except, in a few stubborn corners of the map, where they still are.*
One-stop reference
Company Intelligence
Every listed company in Latin America — financials, ownership and structure for 1,450+ companies across 26 exchanges, in one place.
Browse the directory →
A Verdict in Seoul, A Pattern That Keeps Repeating
This week’s ruling in Seoul is not really a Korean story. It just happens to be the one making headlines out of Asia today.
Strip away the country and the constitution, and it becomes something readers in São Paulo, Bogotá and Lima will recognise instantly: a former head of state, once untouchable, now formally a criminal. South Korea’s Supreme Court upheld a seven-year prison sentence for Yoon Suk Yeol this week, closing the first of several criminal cases stemming from his brief attempt to impose martial law. South Korea’s Supreme Court on Thursday upheld a seven-year prison sentence for former President Yoon Suk Yeol in the first case to reach the country’s highest court from his several criminal trials related to his brief imposition of martial law in 2024.
It is a tidy, procedural sentence. It is also part of a much bigger global story that runs straight through Latin America, the region that pioneered the modern art of prosecuting ex-leaders.
This is the region still writing the rulebook on presidential accountability, and Seoul’s verdict simply confirms the practice is spreading. For The Rio Times, that makes this the must-read pattern of the day.
The question worth asking is not why Yoon was convicted, but why so many of his counterparts across the Pacific, and across the Atlantic, are ending their careers in the dock rather than in quiet retirement.
Korea’s Long Wait for Closure
Yoon’s fall was swift and dramatic even by the standards of a country used to political drama. He declared martial law in December 2024, deployed troops to the National Assembly, and was gone from office within weeks.
The court’s reasoning this week went well beyond the original declaration itself. The court upheld an April ruling by the Seoul High Court that found Yoon guilty of infringing on Cabinet members’ right to deliberate before he declared martial law, falsifying the official proclamation to cover up the lapse before later destroying the document, and deploying presidential security forces to illegally resist law enforcement efforts to arrest him weeks after his impeachment.
Commuters gathered around screens at Seoul’s railway station to watch the ruling broadcast live, a small but telling ritual of a nation needing this chapter closed.
What makes the Korean case notable is the speed and totality of the institutional response. Martial law lasted only hours before lawmakers broke through a blockade of heavily armed soldiers and police at Seoul’s National Assembly to vote it down.
Korea shows a democracy’s institutions working exactly as designed under pressure, a template Latin America knows painfully well from its own recent history.
Peru: The Prison Built for Presidents
Nowhere has this pattern gone further than Peru, where accountability for ex-leaders is no longer an event but a fixture of the political landscape.
The numbers alone tell the story. In Peru, no fewer than four former presidents are currently serving time in Lima’s Barbadillo prison, a single facility that has become a kind of living monument to unaccountable power finally answering for itself.
That prison’s population keeps growing. It is serving his sentence in the same prison holding Toledo and former President Pedro Castillo, who is facing what could be a 34-year prison sentence for his 2022 attempt to dissolve Congress. The same prison also housed late Alberto Fujimori, former Peruvian president who was imprisoned until his release in 2023.
Alejandro Toledo’s case shows how far back the reckoning reaches. In October 2024, Toledo was sentenced to 20 years and six months in prison for accepting $35 million in bribes from the construction firm Odebrecht. Toledo, a 78-year-old economist who holds a doctorate from Stanford University, governed the nation between 2001 and 2006.
This is structural, not incidental. Since the turn of the millennium, no fewer than seven presidents have been brought to trial or faced legal challenges relating to allegations of corruption or human rights abuses, while an eighth shot himself dead when police were closing in. Francisco Sagasti and Valentín Paniagua are the exceptions.
Brazil’s Reckoning: Twenty-Seven Years for a Coup
If Peru shows what happens when accountability becomes routine, Brazil shows what happens when it finally arrives after decades of institutional caution.
The scale of the sentence stunned even hardened court-watchers. The latest to join this list is Jair Bolsonaro, who was sentenced to 27 years in prison by Braz
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗


