South Korea parliament passes bill stripping prosecutors of investigative powers


SEOUL, March 20 (Reuters) - ⁠South Korea's parliament passed a sweeping legal reform bill on Friday that will ⁠strip prosecutors of investigative powers, a move that the government argues will curb ‌the risk of political abuse of one of the country's most powerful state bodies.

The legislation will create a new agency that will exclusively handle indictments and prosecution and spin off the investigative function to a separate ​agency.

The landmark vote formalises the separation of powers that ⁠President Lee Jae Myung and his ⁠liberal Democratic Party say is needed to prevent political abuse of unchecked prosecutorial power.

The push ⁠by ‌liberals to break up the prosecution service gained momentum after Yoon Suk Yeol, its former head, was accused by political rivals of using the institution to ⁠gain the presidency and persecute opponents.

The conservative Yoon's short-lived martial ​law declaration in December ‌2024 became, for many reform advocates, the final argument for dismantling the institution ⁠that made him.

The ​bill's passage caps a decades-long fight in South Korean politics to break up the prosecution service. Reform calls mounted as prosecutors were accused of targeting political enemies while protecting insiders, with liberals arguing ⁠that such concentrated power invited abuse and weakened ​democratic accountability.

Park Eun-jung, a former prosecutor and lawmaker from the liberal Rebuilding Korea Party, said the point of the reform was to correct "a shameful history of prosecutors changing the standard of ⁠the law to suit their political advantage."

But critics, including the conservative opposition, who had sought to block the vote with a filibuster, say the overhaul risks weakening checks on investigators and turning reform into a tool of the incumbent government.

Choi Jin-a, a law professor at ​Korea University, said the bill would strip away the means ⁠to guarantee the prosecution service’s political neutrality and independence, "making prosecutors and police even more beholden ​to political power."

Supporters say ending the prosecution's monopoly is ‌precisely the point.

"In democracy, no function is controlled ​by one group, and power works for the people through dispersion and checks," said former Democratic Party lawmaker Choe Kang-wook.

(Reporting by Kyu-seok ShimEditing by Ed Davies)

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