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Parliamentary committee inspects vote counting site amid protests

Created at 2 Jul · 7:50 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

A special parliamentary committee investigating ballot shortages from the June 3 local elections conducted its first on-site inspection at a Seoul gymnasium, which had been blockaded by protesters for 27 days. Lawmakers confirmed ballot boxes and voting logs were stored inside but raised concerns over security measures.

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Key Numbers

27 daysprotest duration at venue
June 3local election date
June 5protest start date
July 2inspection date
380ballot boxes inspected
2.47 millionballots stored
2,000police personnel deployed

Who's Involved

Parliamentary committee
investigating ballot shortages
Rep. Yoon Sang-hyun
leader of the special committee
Protesters
demanding election rerun, blockading venue
Police
cleared protesters and secured the site
Election officials
briefed committee members
Parliamentary committee inspects vote counting site amid protests

↳ Why This Matters

The inspection aims to uncover the causes of ballot shortages during the recent local elections, which led to protests and demands for a rerun, potentially impacting public trust in the electoral process and future election security measures.

Key facts

  • Members of a special parliamentary committee inspected a vote counting venue in Seoul.
  • The venue had been blockaded by protesters for 27 days following ballot shortages in the June 3 local elections.
  • Lawmakers confirmed the presence of ballot boxes, ballots, and voting logs.
  • Concerns were raised regarding the lack of surveillance cameras and security measures at the storage site.
  • Police deployed approximately 2,000 personnel to manage the situation and clear protesters.

Members of a special parliamentary committee investigating ballot shortages that occurred during the June 3 local elections conducted their first on-site inspection on Thursday at the Olympic Park Handball Gymnasium in southern Seoul. The venue had been blockaded by protesters for 27 days, beginning on June 5, who were demanding a rerun of the elections. Police cleared protesters from the stadium's entrance to allow the committee access. During the inspection, lawmakers, led by committee chief Rep. Yoon Sang-hyun, examined a basement storage area containing approximately 380 ballot boxes, around 2.47 million ballots, and voting logs. They confirmed the materials were still stored inside but expressed concerns over the absence of surveillance cameras and other security measures. The committee did not open any ballot boxes. Scuffles were observed outside the stadium, with some protesters clashing and tearing American flags. Some protesters opposed the inspection, stating they would only permit special counsel investigators or those with a warrant. Police deployed about 2,000 personnel to prevent further clashes, and one protester was taken to a hospital for a foot injury. Earlier in the day, committee members visited the Songpa District Election Commission to receive a briefing from election officials on ballot paper management.

Frequently asked questions

The committee inspected the site to investigate ballot shortages that occurred during the June 3 local elections and to assess the storage conditions of election materials.

Protesters were demanding a rerun of the elections due to ballot shortages and were preventing the removal of ballot boxes stored at the venue.

The committee confirmed that ballot boxes, ballots, and voting logs were stored at the site but noted a lack of surveillance cameras and security measures.

No, the committee did not open any of the ballot boxes during the on-site inspection.

What Happens Next

01Further investigation by the parliamentary committee into ballot shortages.
02Potential follow-up actions based on the inspection findings.

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Cadence

How It Developed

A special parliamentary committee investigating ballot shortages entered a vote counting venue.
Protesters had blockaded the Olympic Park Handball Gymnasium in southern Seoul since June 5.
Police cleared protesters from the stadium entrance to allow committee access.
One man was arrested for obstructing official duties.
Lawmakers inspected stored ballot boxes, ballots, and voting logs.
The committee noted a lack of surveillance cameras and security measures.
Protesters clashed outside the stadium, with some opposing the inspection.
Approximately 2,000 police personnel were deployed to the site.

Sources

T1
Parliamentary committee conducts 1st on-site inspection at blockaded vote counting siteYonhap News Agency

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