South Korea parliament drops constitutional amendment vote tied to martial law


A view of the hall at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, 07 December, 2024. JEON HEON-KYUN/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

SEOUL, May 8 (Reuters) - South ⁠Korea's parliamentary speaker Woo Won-shik said on Friday that a ⁠bill to amend the constitution to tighten rules on martial ‌law would not proceed to a plenary vote after a filibuster by the opposition conservative People Power Party (PPP).

• Six political parties, including the ruling Democratic Party, proposed the ​bill, which would require the president to ⁠seek approval from parliament when ⁠declaring martial law, according to a draft posted on the National Assembly's ⁠website.

• ‌The move came after South Korea was rocked by conservative former President Yoon Suk Yeol's brief imposition of martial ⁠law in late 2024.

• The draft specifies that if ​parliament votes against ‌imposing martial law, or fails to approve it within 48 hours, ⁠the effectiveness ​of a president's unilateral declaration of martial law would be nullified immediately.

• The bill would also amend the constitution to include in its preamble a ⁠reference to a key moment in South ​Korea's transition to democracy - the Gwangju uprising. Hundreds, and possibly thousands, are believed to have been killed when citizens rose up against military dictator ⁠Chun Doo-hwan on May 18, 1980.

• Amending the constitution requires the consent of at least 191 lawmakers in the 286-member assembly, Woo said.

• An earlier vote on the amendment failed on Thursday after the ​PPP boycotted the session, leaving it short of ⁠the quorum needed.

• South Korea’s presidential office expressed regret that the constitutional ​amendment bill failed due to the PPP's ‌opposition and urged parliament to continue ​discussions on constitutional revision in the second half of its term.

(Reporting by Heejin Kim and Kyu-seok ShimEditing by Ed Davies)

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