Archive December 15, 2025

South Korea indicts ex-leader Yoon over power plot provoking North

Prosecutors have indicted former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol for insurrection, accusing him of seeking to provoke military aggression from North Korea to help consolidate his power.

Special prosecutor Cho Eun-seok told a briefing on Monday that his team had indicted Yoon, five former cabinet members, and 18 others on insurrection charges, following a six-month probe into his declaration of martial law last year.

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“To create justification for declaring martial law, they tried to lure North Korea into mounting an armed aggression, but failed as North Korea did not respond militarily,” Cho said.

Yoon plunged South Korea into a crisis when he declared martial law in December 2024, prompting protesters and lawmakers to swarm parliament to force a vote against the measure.

The decree was quickly declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, and Yoon was subsequently impeached, removed from office, and jailed.

Martial law plotted for more than a year

Cho, one of three independent counsels appointed by South Korea’s current president, Lee Jae Myung, to investigate the martial law declaration, said Yoon and his supporters in the military had plotted since at least October 2023 to introduce the measure.

The plan involved installing collaborators in key military posts and removing a defence minister who opposed the scheme, Cho said.

The group even held dinner parties to build support for the plan among military leaders, he added.

Cho said Yoon, his Defence Minister Kim Yong Hyun, and Yeo In-hyung, commander of the military’s counterintelligence agency at the time, had directed military activities against North Korea since October 2024, seeking to provoke an aggressive response that would justify the declaration of martial law.

Yoon was indicted last month for ordering drone flights carrying propaganda leaflets into the North to inflame tensions – prompting his successor, Lee, to say earlier this month that he was weighing an apology to Pyongyang.

‘Antistate forces’

Cho said the provocations did not draw the expected reaction from North Korea, most likely because Pyongyang was tied up in supporting Russia’s war in Ukraine.

But Yoon pressed ahead regardless, he said, branding his political opponents – including the liberal-controlled legislature and the then-leader of his own conservative People Power Party – as “anti-state forces” in a bid to justify his actions.

Under South Korean law, insurrection is punishable by life in prison or the death penalty.

Yoon, who has been in jail since July following a stint in custody earlier in the year, insists that his martial law declaration was intended to draw public support for his fight against the opposition Democratic Party, which was abusing its control of parliament to cripple the work of the government.

African Players In Europe: Salah Off To AFCON Amid Uncertainty

Mohamed Salah heads for Morocco this week to captain Egypt in the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) amid uncertainty over his future at Liverpool.

Salah came off the bench midway through the first half and set up the second goal in a 2-0 Premier League win over Brighton at the weekend.

After the match, manager Arne Slot said there was “no issue to resolve” with his star forward, but speculation continues to rumble over the Egyptian’s future after his outburst last weekend.

AFP Sport highlights African headline-makers in the major European leagues:

READ ALSO: Mane v Mbemba: An AFCON Cameo To Relish In Morocco

ENGLAND

MOHAMED SALAH (Liverpool)

The 33-year-old came on as a substitute and seized his chance by setting up Liverpool’s second goal for Hugo Ekitike. Salah had been left out of Liverpool’s squad for Tuesday’s Champions League victory at Inter Milan after his explosive rant about Slot following the recent draw at Leeds. That was the third successive game that Salah had been left on the bench and his furious claim that he had been “thrown under the bus” hinted at a potential departure from the troubled Premier League champions during the January transfer window.

CALVIN BASSEY (Fulham)

The Nigeria defender scored in his side’s 3-2 win at Burnley. Bassey grabbed Fulham’s second goal to put them 2-1 up in the 31st minute en route to their first victory at Turf Moor since 1951. The 25-year-old’s close-range header from Harry Wilson’s cross was his first goal since an FA Cup tie against Manchester United in March.

IBRAHIM SANGARE (Nottingham Forest)

The Ivory Coast midfielder capped his side’s 3-0 victory over Tottenham with the final goal. Sangare netted in the 79th minute at the City Ground, bending a superb strike in off the post with the outside of his foot. The 28-year-old’s second goal this season — and his first in seven matches — helped boost Forest’s bid to avoid relegation.

SPAIN

AKOR ADAMS, CHIDERA EJUKE (Sevilla)

Nigerians Adams and Ejuke celebrated AFCON call-ups with a goal each as Sevilla hammered Real Oviedo 4-0 in La Liga. Adams opened the scoring in the fourth minute and Ejuke completed the rout with one minute of regular time remaining.

GERMANY

MOHAMED AMOURA (Wolfsburg)

Amoura scored for the second straight match in Wolfsburg’s 3-1 Bundesliga win at Borussia Moenchengladbach. With the team’s level after 34 minutes, Amoura was on the spot to blast in a deflected Christian Eriksen cross, putting the visitors back in front. The 25-year-old has six goals and two assists for Wolfsburg in the league this season.

RAMY BENSEBAINI (Borussia Dortmund)

Borussia defender Bensebaini scored his side’s only goal in a disappointing 1-1 draw at Freiburg. With Dortmund teammate and Guinea international Serhou Guirassy struggling in front of goal and missing chances, Bensebaini took matters into his own hands with 31 minutes gone. The Algerian latched onto a Yan Couto free-kick and blasted home from close range.

FRANCE

HIMAD ABDELLI, HAROUNA DJIBIRIN (Angers)

It: Welcome to Derry fans stunned as episode 8 confirms major character theory

The final episode of It: Welcome to Derry confirmed a major theory about one of the show’s characters and their connection to the 2017 film It

This story contains spoilers for episode 8 of It: Welcome to Derry.

It: Welcome to Derry has validated a fan theory regarding one of the programme’s characters – and their link to the 2017 film It.

The prequel series wrapped up on Sunday, December 14, with the eighth instalment, Winter Fire. As the surviving group of youngsters – Marge Truman (Matilda Lawler), Ronnie Grogan (Amanda Christine), and Lilly Bainbridge (Clara Stack) – battled to vanquish Pennywise the Clown (Bill Skarsgard) and rescue their mate Will Hanlon (Blake Cameron James).

Marge’s true identity was at last revealed when she was shown to be the mum of one of the original Losers’ Club members from It (2017), Richie Tozier (Finn Wolfhard).

The HBO Max programme serves as a prequel to the horror flick. The revelation happened when Pennywise frightened Marge in the concluding episode, as he accidentally revealed her destiny. To her bewilderment, he addressed her as Marge Tozier, reports the Mirror US.

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The shape-shifting creature then informed her she isn’t a Tozier “yet” and disclosed further truth by revealing she has a son called Richie. Pennywise then presented her with a missing poster featuring Richie and questioned her, “Don’t you recognize your little boy?”.

He went on to describe a storyline that viewers of It (2017) and It Chapter Two (2019) will recognise, which is that Richie and his “filthy friends” are responsible for his death. Fans were thrilled about the revelation as many had been theorising that Marge was Richie’s mother, particularly given the romantic storyline between her and Rich Santos (Adrian S. Cartaya).

Many believed that Marge had named Richie after Rich, who perished whilst rescuing her during the Black Spit fire depicted in episode seven. On X – formerly Twitter – one enthusiastic fan declared, “MARGE IS RITCHIE’S MOM YEAH F–K YEAHHHHH.” While another exclaimed, “They confirmed that Marge is really Richie’s mom, FFS, I’m freaking out.”

A third viewer commented, “About Marge being Richie’s mom, yeah I get that this isn’t as bombshell a revelation as it could be, I think it was so obvious when everyone first saw Marge and Rich that it was almost obvious, it would be a surprise if she wasn’t.”

Yet Marge’s confirmation as Richie’s mother wasn’t the sole nod to the sequels, as the finale also included a surprise appearance from Beverly Marsh (Sophia Lillis) during the episode’s conclusion.

The final episode features a post-credits sequence set 26 years into the future, which occurs one year before the events of It (2017) unfold. During this scene, the now-aged Ingrid Kersh is shown in her quarters at Juniper Hill Asylum, where she has resided for the past 26 years.

Madeline Stowe portrayed the younger Ingrid in Welcome to Derry, whilst Joan Gregson returned to reprise her role from the second It film as the older version. Ingrid ventures out of her room, drawn by the sound of sobbing, which leads her to Room 115.

As she enters, viewers are met with the familiar silhouette of a girl weeping next to a man, both standing before the lifeless body of a woman hanging.

The deceased woman, who took her own life, is revealed to be Elfrida Marsh. It soon becomes apparent that the red-haired girl in tears is Beverly, as the woman was her mother, and the unseen man is her abusive father.

Beverly turns fully towards the camera, confirming her identity.

It: Welcome to Derry is the brainchild of Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti, and Jason Fuchs, all of whom had a hand in the two It films. Fuchs also serves as a showrunner, alongside Brad Caleb Kane.

The It film/TV franchise is an adaptation of Stephen King’s 1986 novel, It, which tells the chilling tale of an evil clown entity named Pennywise that preys on children in Derry, Maine.

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Set in 1962, the series follows the Hanlons, a military family who relocate to Derry and find themselves ensnared in the town’s sinister secrets as horrifying events start to unravel. Concurrently, a group of youngsters is trying to piece together the mystery of Derry’s missing children.

World’s most popular ‘so feminine and elegant’ fragrance hits rare sale weeks before Christmas

Touted as the world’s most popular female scent, this ‘elegant’ fragrance is sure to be the ideal gift for a loved one this holiday season – and right now, it’s on sale

If you’ve been eyeing up a cult-favourite perfume to add to your shopping list without breaking the bank, you’re in luck. This limited-time Lookfantastic sale has reduced the price of Carolina Herrera’s top-selling Good Girl perfume to a rate better than duty-free. But you’ll need to act fast; there’s no telling how long this rare deal will last.

Carolina Herrera, a brand renowned for its chic and unmistakable high-heel bottle design, has one flagship fragrance that remains a hit with shoppers, so much so that Lookfantastic has touted it as the No.1 most popular female scent in the world.

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Housed in a sleek blue stiletto bottle, the Carolina Herrera Good Girl perfume—the original and first in a series of six fragrances under the ‘Good Girl’ title—usually carries a hefty price tag, around £100, depending on where you shop and the size you choose.

You can grab 50ml of this iconic perfume from Boots for £98, or from Lookfantastic for £78.40, reduced from £98. Alternatively, you can find a 50ml bottle currently retailing for £68.51, down from £109.75, on Amazon.

But it’s now discounted to £53.60, competing with duty-free prices, where the Good Girl fragrance was selling for £55 (30ml).

The Good Girl perfume is a tantalising mix of light and dark notes, encapsulating the captivating complexity of women. This powerful and feminine scent is ideal for the contemporary woman, boasting contrasting notes that leave the wearer feeling empowered and confident.

The fragrance marries the sweet, captivating and seductive essence of jasmine, radiating bright femininity, with the enigmatic depth of richly scented cocoa. Invigorating Tonka notes follow, whilst almond and coffee inject bursts of daring energy, resulting in an enticing yet refined scent that honours both your light and dark sides.

Beyond the fragrance itself, the bottle serves as a stunning centrepiece for your perfume collection, introducing a pop of colour and distinctive design that stands out on any dressing table.

This iconic scent has amassed over 2,000 five-star reviews on Lookfantastic, with customers unable to contain their enthusiasm. One delighted purchaser gushes: “I’ve repurchased this perfume so many times – it’s one that people always compliment me on, so I highly recommend it.”

Another fan raves: “This perfume has a beautiful, well-balanced scent. It’s perfect for both daytime and evening wear. The longevity is impressive, and the sillage is just right-not too strong, but noticeable. Overall, a great choice for anyone who loves elegant and sophisticated fragrances.”

However, one reviewer does express their reservation about the design, commenting: “The worst thing about this for me is the bottle, it’s a bit of an eyesore.”

This shopper still awards the fragrance five stars, writing: “I have absolutely found my new love. I’ve used this perfume every single day and even cancelled a subscription for a perfume I was previously wearing. This perfume is absolutely one of those scents that you could wear during the day, at work AND on the dance floor. I feel bold, confident and sexy wearing it. I feel like I can accomplish my goals for the day, and I feel happy. Its a really lovely scent that sticks and every time I go out, I get compliments.”

One delighted buyer echoes these glowing thoughts: “I have a very large perfume collection, and this is one of my favourites. It’s beautiful, perfect for a date night, and also for day-to-day use. I always get asked what I’m wearing every time I wear this perfume. Every girl needs this perfume.”

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And this happy buyer beams: “I love my Good Girl Eau de Parfum. It is so feminine and elegant. Sweet and floral, exactly what I want from perfumes, a beautiful decoration for my dressing table. Very strong and intense at the beginning, but after a few minutes, it’s perfect. The smell is long-lasting. I heard many compliments. The bottle is beautiful and one of a kind.”