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South Korean lawmakers end filibuster over anti-terror bill | South Korean lawmakers end filibuster over anti-terror bill |
(about 1 hour later) | |
SEOUL, South Korea — Lawmakers approved South Korea’s first anti-terror legislation Wednesday after outnumbered opposition lawmakers ended more than a week of nonstop speeches in the National Assembly aimed at delaying the vote. | |
Nearly 160 parliament members voted for the bill, with one voting against it. Opposition lawmakers apparently boycotted. | |
The 38 liberal lawmakers who filibustered said the bill threatens personal freedoms and privacy. They took turns speaking for more than 193 hours in the filibuster beginning Feb. 23, reportedly making it one of the longest of its kind in world politics. | |
They stopped their marathon speeches out of concern that a continuation might cause a public backlash ahead of April parliamentary elections. | |
The last speaker, Lee Jong Kul of the Minjoo Party, spoke for 12 hours and 35 minutes before leaving the podium in the evening, breaking the record for the country’s longest parliamentary speech that had been set Saturday by fellow opposition legislator Jung Cheong Rae, who spoke for 11 hours and 31 minutes. | |
President Park Geun-hye’s conservative government had called for the bill’s quick passage, citing threats from North Korea following its recent nuclear test and rocket launch. | |
Filibusters to block legislative action made a comeback in South Korean politics in 2012 under a law designed to improve parliamentary politics. Before that, partisan strife was so acute that rival lawmakers sometimes engaged in violent shoving matches. | Filibusters to block legislative action made a comeback in South Korean politics in 2012 under a law designed to improve parliamentary politics. Before that, partisan strife was so acute that rival lawmakers sometimes engaged in violent shoving matches. |
The anti-terror bill would enable the country’s spy agency to wiretap phone conversations and collect the personal information of suspects. | The anti-terror bill would enable the country’s spy agency to wiretap phone conversations and collect the personal information of suspects. |
Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. | Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |