SEOUL, South Korea (AP) South Korea's National Assembly paved the way Wednesday for the possible arrest of a left-wing lawmaker who is facing the unusual accusation that he plotted to topple the country's democratically elected government if war broke out with North Korea.
At the heart of the alleged "leftist rebellion" is Lee Seok-ki, a first-time lawmaker from a small leftist party who has long been accused of pro-North Korean views.
The assembly overwhelmingly passed a proposal on Wednesday that would lift Lee's legislative immunity against arrest. A district court will now determine whether to issue an arrest warrant. It is believed to be the first time the assembly has passed such a motion over rebellion charges.
South Korea's spy agency accuses Lee of leading a secret May meeting of 130 members of his United Progressive Party aimed at attacking infrastructure if dueling threats between the Koreas this past spring had led to war. Lee was sentenced in 2003 to 2 1/2 years in prison for playing a part in a pro-North Korea organization but later granted amnesty.
There has been massive local media interest in the story, which reveals a still-bitter political rift between left and right that has roots in the fight against Japan's 1910-45 colonial rule of Korea and the division of the peninsula into U.S. and Soviet-backed halves after the end of World War II. It also raises real fears among some here that despite South Korea's powerhouse economy and hard-earned democracy, secret groups are working to hand North Korea's autocratic government control of the Korean Peninsula.