Protester arrested for making threats with knife outside ex-President Moon's home
CHANGWON, South Korea, Aug. 18 (Yonhap) -- A protester was arrested Thursday on charges of making threats with a knife in front of former President Moon Jae-in's home.
The conservative activist, who had been staging a one-man protest in front of Moon's home in Yangsan, 309 kilometers southeast of Seoul, since Moon left office on May 10, threatened an aide to Moon and others with a box cutter Tuesday, police said.

This photo captured from Facebook shows a protester being arrested by police on charges of threatening an aide to former President Moon Jae-in in front of Moon's home in Yangsan, 309 kilometers southeast of Seoul, on Aug. 16, 2022. (PHOTO NOT FOR SALE) (Yonhap)
The man also allegedly made a verbal threat to Moon and his wife Monday when the couple came out of their house for a stroll around the neighborhood.
The Ulsan District Court issued an arrest warrant for the suspect, citing the risk of him destroying evidence and fleeing.
Since his retirement, Moon and his neighborhood have been plagued by noisy protests, and the former president in late May filed a complaint against four activists, including the arrested man, for making insults and threats.
(END)
-
(LEAD) Family of 5 found dead in 3 separate locations
-
Allies vow stern measures against Russia-N. Korea arms deal
-
(LEAD) Opposition party leader ends 24-day hunger strike for treatment
-
(4th LD) Xi says he will seriously consider visit to South Korea: official
-
(2nd LD) U.S. finalizes national security 'guardrails' for CHIPS funding
-
5 years after signing, future of inter-Korean military accord unclear
-
In desperation, N. Korea, Russia turn to one another for mutual assistance rivaling U.S.-S. Korea cooperation
-
Yoon seeks to carve out bigger role for S. Korea in Indo-Pacific, world
-
Despite gov't assurance, seafood safety woes spread in S. Korea over Japan's Fukushima plan
-
S. Korea-U.S.-Japan summit outcomes herald deeper, consistent security cooperation against N. Korean, other challenges: analysts