National
 
    
  
+Login    +Register    +Find Id / Pw Home  l  Archives  l  Learning Times  |  Sitemap  |  Subscription  l  Media Kit  l  PDF
   Home > Newszone > National > Political Digest >
  National
    Photo News  
    Political Digest  
    Nation Digest  
    Provincial News  
    Defense Affairs  
    Airline News  
    Foreign Affairs / N.Korea  
    History  
    Seoul Air Show  
    Obituary  
    Earth in danger  
    2012 Nuclear Security Summit  
    Icons & influencers  
    The Uncharted Path  
    Global Women's Leadership Conference  
    Essay Contest on 21st Century East Asian Community  
    Dokdo Essay Contest  
    Ieodo Special  
  Biz/Finance
  BusinessFocus
  Technology
  Arts & Living
  Sports
  Opinion
  Community
  Special
  Science
  The Learning Times
     About English News
     iBT TOEFL
     Essay
     
 
   12-24-2008 16:49 여성 음성 남성 음성
Prosecutors Asked to Look Into Assembly Melee

By Kim Sue-young
Staff Reporter

The National Assembly secretariat Wednesday filed a complaint with the prosecution against opposition party lawmakers and their secretaries for instigating a violent clash at the Assembly last Thursday.

They include Reps. Moon Hak-jin of the main opposition Democratic Party (DP) and Lee Jung-hee of the Democratic Labor Party (DLP), who joined the melee involving lawmakers of the governing and opposition parties over a motion to submit the free trade agreement (FTA) with the United States to the Assembly floor.

``The two legislators are accused of contempt of the Assembly speaker and committing damage to public facilities, while five secretaries are additionally accused of mob violence,'' the secretariat said.

The office also asked prosecutors to investigate how items such as a sledgehammer and a crowbar could be brought into the National Assembly.

To prevent the recurrence of similar incidents, it plans to tighten security in and around the Assembly and prepare regulations to ban violent clashes in the legislature.

Last Thursday, the ruling Grand National Party (GNP) unilaterally introduced a motion to ratify the FTA in a closed-door committee session. The party soon advanced it to an Assembly subcommittee for deliberations, the last step before a final vote.

The GNP says the trade deal had to be approved as soon as possible, preferably this year, because the country, which is heavily dependent on exports, is expected to gain much from the pact.

Opposition party members smashed up the doors with a sledgehammer and even used a chainsaw in an attempt to stop the unilateral action.

They have claimed that the ruling camp must present protective measures for farmers and businesspeople, who are vulnerable to increased U.S. imports, before passing the motion.

The four-hour brawl damaged doors, tables and carpets, with damages estimated at 19.8 milion won (nearly $15,000) and left one Assembly guard with an injury that will take three weeks to heal.

The clock is ticking for the opposition parties, as the GNP set Dec. 25 as the date it will finish discussing how to ratify the motion.

Once the contentious motion is advanced to the main floor of the Assembly, the ruling party can pass it since it commands more than a majority of 172 seats in the 299-member unicameral legislature. The DP has 83 seats.

DP Chairman Chung Se-kyun questioned why governing party secretaries who sprayed fire extinguishers were not listed in the complaint.

ksy@koreatimes.co.kr





yistory@koreatimes.co.kr

법원 "의약품 '리베이트'는 과세 대상"

檢, 김효재 前수석 15일 오전 소환

경찰, 이태원 등 외국인 밀집지역 특별관리

한국에 대해 무엇이든 답변해 주는 블로거가 있다

"빌 클린턴, 르윈스키 첫만남부터 불꽃 튀어"

'대통령 찬양' 댓글 알바들 딱 걸렸다

"北 휴대전화 요금이 무려... 놀라운 변화"

SNS에 '김정은 암살설'… 근거없다

美 '팝의 여왕' 휘트니 휴스턴 사망


 
 
[Exclusive] Renault Samsung aims ..
Maintenance cost for F-15K soars..
Opposition’s rise in Busan alerts..
Medical Internship abolition plan..
Samsung chairman Lee Kun-hee sued..
Moody's cuts ratings on Italy, Po..
Smart TV spat pits KT against Sam..
Smoking to be banned along Gangna..
Brand-name freaks
China gauging NK leader’s level o..
(575) Arriving at a restaurant
Money Is Winner
More belt-tightening for Greece