PPP expels member for hanging Japanese flag on Independence Movement Day
SEOUL, March 24 (Yonhap) -- The ruling People Power Party (PPP) had one member quit the party after he was confirmed to be the man who flew the Japanese flag on a national holiday marking South Korea's independence movement against Japanese colonial rule, a lawmaker said Friday.
The person, who identified himself as a PPP member in a media interview, came under fire after hanging the Japanese flag outside his apartment in the central city of Sejong, 112 kilometers south of Seoul, on March 1, a national holiday marking the country's 1919 independence movement.
"He engaged in a stunt that goes completely against the common sense of ordinary party members," Rep. Lee Chul-gyu, the PPP's secretary general, said in an MBC radio interview. "We immediately convened a meeting of the party affairs committee and … took disciplinary action and asked him to leave the party, and he immediately quit."
Lee said the party has yet to establish a screening system for its nearly 4 million non-lawmaker members.

This March 7, 2023, file photo shows a man waving a Japanese flag at a rally calling for the removal of a statue of a girl symbolizing victims of Japan's wartime sexual slavery in the central city of Sejong, 112 kilometers south of Seoul. The man earlier drew criticism over hanging a Japanese flag on the March 1 Independence Movement Day this year. (Pool photo) (Yonhap)
mlee@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
U.S. military stages 'Elephant Walk' training with F-16 fighters
-
S. Korea slams N. Korea's planned satellite launch, warns of consequences
-
(LEAD) Japanese warship arrives in S. Korea for multinational WMD-interception naval drill
-
N. Korea open to high-level talks with Japan if Tokyo unshackled by past: vice FM
-
(LEAD) N. Korea notifies Japan of plan to launch satellite between May 31-June 11: Kyodo