The People's Revolutionary Party Incidents were legal cases in which the South Korean government accused individuals of socialist or left inclinations according to the Anti-communism Law in 1965 (the First Incident) and National Security Law in 1975 (the Second Incident).
On 23 January 2007 the District Court of Central Seoul found the defendants not guilty in regards to the accused violations of the Emergency Presidential Acts, National Security Act, preparation and conspiracy of civil war, and the Anti-communism law.
The first incident occurred on 14 August 1965. The Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA) claimed Do Ye-jong (ëÂÂìÂÂ좠, é½禮éÂÂ), Yang Choon-woo (ìÂÂì¶Âì°, æ¥ÂæÂ¥éÂÂ), Park Hyun-chae (ë°ÂÃÂÂì±Â) and ten other individuals organized the People's Revolutionary Party. According to the National Intelligence Service (successor to the KCIA in 1981), this was "an organization attempting to overthrow the Republic of Korea according to North Korean programs" that "tried to recruit more people from various backgrounds to expand the party structure." Do, Yang and Park and other six were sentenced to six years imprisonment, while the others were sentenced to a year of imprisonment and three years probation.
The second incident, also known as the "Committee for Re-establishment of the People's Revolutionary Party (PRP) Incident" (in Korean: <span lang="kr">ì¸민ÃÂÂ몠ë¹ ì¬건ìÂÂìÂÂàì¬건</span>) in South Korea, took place on 9 April 1975. In December 1972, the Park Chung-Hee government launched the "Yushin-system": an anti-constitutional system in favor of Park's autocracy named after the Meiji Restoration of Japan. Also, the abduction of Kim Dae-jung, a leading politician of the opposing party added to the anger of South Korean people caused by the Yushin system. From October 1973, demonstrations against the Park government gained strength.
Meanwhile, on 3 April 1974, Park announced the existence of an extreme socialist group: the "People's Revolutionary Party", and prohibited all activities related to the party.
As demonstrations increased against the Park dictatorship, the KCIA arrested 1024 individuals without warrant on 25 April 1974 under the National Security Law. 253 of them were imprisoned. On 9 April 1975, the Supreme Court of South Korea sentenced eight men to death. Only 18 hours after the announcement of the death penalty, the government executed the eight individuals:
In 2002, an investigatory commission found the charges pressed against those individuals were false. Confessions were obtained using methods such as torture and coercion. It is now widely evidenced that such a "People's Revolutionary Party" never existed in reality, and that it was fabricated by the KCIA.
In January 2007 a Seoul court posthumously acquitted all eight victims of the incident. In August 2007 the Seoul Central District Court awarded compensation in excess of 63 billion won to the families of the victims.