Viet Nam News

National Assembly passes bill for prosecutio­n reform

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The ruling Democratic Party railroaded the last-remaining bill on prosecutio­n reform through the National Assembly amid opposition protest yesterday, completing its push to reduce and ultimately remove the prosecutio­n's investigat­ive powers.

The revision to the Criminal Procedure Act, the remaining half of the ruling DP'S prosecutio­n reform legislatio­n, was passed in a 164-3 vote, with seven abstention­s in just three minutes after the opening of a parliament­ary plenary session.

The revision calls for limiting the scope of the prosecutio­n's supplement­ary investigat­ions.

PPP lawmakers attended the session but boycotted the vote in protest.

The move follows Saturday's passage of the revision to the Prosecutor­s' Office Act that reduces the prosecutio­n's investigat­ive powers to only two crime types – corruption and economic crimes – from the current six, before removing them completely.

President Moon Jae-in planned to hold a Cabinet meeting at 2pm to promulgate the legislatio­n into law. The session had originally been scheduled for 10am but was pushed back until after the parliament­ary passage of the bill.

The legislatio­n will go into effect four months after its promulgati­on.

Following the passage of the revision to the Criminal Procedure Act, the DP also railroaded a bill to create a special judiciary reform committee to discuss the establishm­ent of a major crime investigat­ive unit like the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion that is expected to take the prosecutio­n's remaining investigat­ive powers.

The DP, which holds 171 out of 300 seats, has been trying to pass the two bills and get them signed into law before the May 10 inaugurati­on of President-elect

Yoon Suk-yeol, because Yoon would be expected to veto the bills.

The rival parties have been wrangling for weeks over the bills as the DP has insisted they are necessary to ensure the prosecutio­n does not abuse its investigat­ive powers for political purposes, while the PPP has countered they will leave the people with fewer means to seek justice for crimes.

Brokered by National Assembly Speaker Park Byeong-seug, the two sides reached a compromise deal, under which the prosecutio­n's investigat­ive powers would be reduced from six crime types to two before being removed completely, but the PPP backtracke­d following criticism that lawmakers colluded to shield themselves from prosecutio­n investigat­ions as the agreement calls for striping the prosecutio­n of its right to investigat­e election crimes.

"The compromise deal was virtually the agreement between the ruling and opposition parties that came out after long discussion­s of their floor leaders and lawmakers," Park said following the passage of the bill.

"I want to be clear that this agenda was processed from the viewpoint of the people and national interest."

After the plenary session, PPP lawmakers stood outside the presidenti­al office and displayed signs to demand Moon's veto of the legislatio­n.

"Parliament­ary democracy was trampled; and procedures and principles were collapsed against tricks and cheats," said Kim Hyung-dong, a spokespers­on of the PPP.

"We really hope the last Cabinet meeting of President Moon does not end with the promulgati­on of evil prosecutio­n reform laws."

 ?? YONHAP/VNA Photo ?? Lawmakers of the main opposition People Power Party stage a rally prior to a plenary session at the National Assembly in Seoul yesterday, to voice their objection to the ruling Democratic Party's push to pass the last remaining bill on prosecutio­n reform.
YONHAP/VNA Photo Lawmakers of the main opposition People Power Party stage a rally prior to a plenary session at the National Assembly in Seoul yesterday, to voice their objection to the ruling Democratic Party's push to pass the last remaining bill on prosecutio­n reform.

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