South Korea’s opposition lawmakers yesterday continued their non-stop speeches for a fifth straight day in parliament to block a vote on a government-backed anti-terrorism bill they said would threaten personal freedoms and privacy if passed into law.
As of Saturday afternoon, South Korean Assembly Member Jung Cheong-rae had talked for more than 11 hours, breaking a record for the nation’s longest parliamentary speech set on Wednesday by fellow opposition legislator Eun Soo-mi, who spoke for 10 hours and 18 minutes.
Jung was the 17th lawmaker to take the podium since opposition lawmakers decided on Tuesday to resort to a filibuster, the nation’s first since 1969.
With the filibuster exceeding 90 hours, it is one of the longest in history. In 2011, Canada’s New Democratic Party orchestrated a session that lasted for 58 hours.
For their plan to succeed, the lawmakers would need to continue their speeches until midnight on March 10, when the current parliamentary session is scheduled to end.
Desperate to prolong their time-dragging efforts, several lawmakers wore sneakers to the podium and refrained from drinking water to avoid going to the bathroom. Most of them spent time reading related laws, academic studies, news articles and Internet comments. One lawmaker pulled out a copy of George Orwell’s 1984 and read extensively from it.
South Korean President Park Geun-hye and her ruling Saenuri Party have endorsed the bill granting greater power to the National Intelligence Service (NIS), Seoul’s main spy agency, to investigate individuals and groups. They point to threats posed by North Korea, which recently conducted a nuclear test and a long-range rocket launch, and activities by militant organizations such as the Islamic State group.
Opposition lawmakers said the bill does not have sufficient measures to prevent the agency from abusing its powers for civilian surveillance.
“It’s North Korea that fired a missile, but why does the NIS want to look into the cellphones of South Koreans? It’s North Korea that fired a rocket, but why does the NIS want to track the bank accounts of South Koreans?” Jung said, as he continued his rambling monologue, often exchanging jabs with the small number of Saenuri lawmakers in presence, who took offense at his comments comparing Park’s government to a dictatorship.
Park is the daughter of former South Korean president Park Chung-hee, who ruled the nation with an iron fist for 18 years before being assassinated by his spy chief in 1979.
The NIS has a history of meddling in politics and spying on civilians and journalists.
Two NIS directors who successively headed the spy service from 1999 to 2003 were convicted and received suspended prison terms for overseeing the monitoring of cellphone conversations of about 1,800 of South Korea’s political, corporate and media elite.
Another former NIS chief was sentenced to three years in prison last year after being found guilty of ordering an illicit online campaign to support then-ruling party candidate and Park Geun-hye ahead of the 2012 presidential election and smear her main liberal rival, Moon Jae-in.
The South Korean Supreme Court later ordered a new trial for Won Sei-hoon after rejecting some of the evidence that was used to convict him at the lower court.
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