Election commission faces probe, major overhaul
The National Election Commission (NEC) is under criminal investigation and intense pressure to make sweeping reforms after unprecedented ballot paper shortages in the local elections last week triggered public fury and allegations of a systematic electoral failure.
The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency on Monday questioned Kim Soon-hwan, head of the People’s Welfare Countermeasure Committee, a Seoul-based nongovernmental organization.
Kim lodged a complaint against NEC officials over cases in which many voters were unable to cast ballots because of the shortages.
Speaking to reporters, Kim likened the incident to the April 19 Revolution, the first democratic movement in Korea in 1960, calling it a major setback for democracy and a grave violation of Korea’s voting rights won through decades of struggle.
His organization accused NEC Chairman Roh Tae-ak and others of abuse of power and dereliction of duty over the commission’s flawed handling of election resources.
Police are examining whether the NEC complied with its own standards for allocating ballot papers as well as the broader
South Korean Election Ballot Shortage Protests
- Protest over ballot shortage in local elections enters 4th day The Korea Herald —
- Ballot shortage cases reach South Korea’s Constitutional Court UPI —
- South Korean president orders probe into election agency UPI —
- Lee says June 3 ballot shortages serious, but fraud not involved The Korea Herald —
- Protest over ballot shortage in local elections enters 4th day Korea Times —