A Seoul court said on Monday it will indefinitely postpone a trial of President Lee Jae-myung on charges of violating election law in 2022.
South Korea's Supreme Court ruled in May, before Lee was elected, that Lee had violated election law by publicly making "false statements" during his 2022 presidential bid, and sent the case back to an appeals court.
The Seoul High Court, which had scheduled a hearing for the case on June 18, said on Monday that it will postpone the hearing "to be decided later" without a date, a court spokesperson confirmed.
Lee's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The court said its decision to postpone the hearing was due to "Constitution Article 84", without elaborating.
South Korea's Constitution, Article 84, says a sitting president is "not subject to criminal prosecution while in office" for most crimes.
However, legal experts are divided on whether that applies to ongoing trials that were already prosecuted before a president was elected.
The National Court Administration under the Supreme Court gave as its opinion that judges of each court where Lee's trials are being held will have to decide whether to stop or proceed, according to its statement to a lawmaker in May.
"The court in charge of hearing the case will determine whether Article 84 of the Constitution should be applied to a criminal defendant who was elected in the presidential election," the statement said.
Lee's ruling Democratic Party, which controls parliament, is planning to pass a bill this week which suspends ongoing trials for the incumbent president, local broadcaster KBS reported on Monday.
The Constitutional Court may be asked to rule whether the bill is unconstitutional, legal experts have said.

Peace deal hopes fade after Trump rejects Iran proposal
UK's Starmer defies calls to quit, says he is getting on with governing
New Israeli law sets military tribunal for those linked to October 7 attack
Russia strikes Ukraine with drones as ceasefire ends
Dutch hospital quarantines 12 over breach of hantavirus protocol
Brazilian flotilla activist returns home, alleges torture during Israel detention
Seven killed in blast in northwest Pakistan market, police say
India's Modi to begin five-nation tour, including UAE
