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Former legislator Tae-seop Geum told the Democratic Party, which enforced the amendments to the Office of Crime Investigation of Senior Public Officials (KAR) in the Legislative Judicial Committee of the National Assembly on the 8th, “Does it make sense to make a promise? of applause for reforming the prosecution by creating the ‘Byeong-woo Coal Law’ “. In those days, former chief Min Jeong-woo could be appointed chief of the airlift.
Representative Geum Jeon posted a post on his Facebook page titled ‘Airborne Law Amendment’ and wrote, “To determine which system change is good or bad, you can substitute it in a period when there was no system.”
Earlier, the Judicial Committee of the National Assembly held a plenary session this morning and approved the amendment to the Air Transport Law. Ho-young Joo, the representative of the People’s Power, and the members of the judicial committee of the People’s Power protested vigorously, but the president of the judiciary, Yoon Ho-joong, enforced the proposal and handling of the amendment to the Transportation Law. Aerial. As a result, the amendment to the Air Transport Law, which focuses on neutralizing rights outside the territory of the opposition party, is scheduled to be presented in plenary session on the 9th.
Representative Geum argued: “If the Democratic Party amendment to the Air Transport Law was in the Park Geun-hye administration, the ruling power could appoint Kim Hak-ei, former Vice Minister of Justice, or Woo Byung-woo, former head of the Ministry of Justice, as head of the airlift without noticing the opposition party. ”
“If those people exercise the right to investigate and prosecute judges and prosecutors, undermining the independence of the judiciary and mobilizing the prosecution for static repression, what kind of controls exist?” He asked: “Who does not convert at an inspection agency? “Do you guarantee it?”
He noted, “Please stop for a moment and think about what you are doing,” he said. “Does it make sense for the world to make an applause pledge to reform the prosecution after making the ‘coal statute'”?
Lastly, Geum Jeon said, “the law that allows the creation of a power agency that can investigate and prosecute judges and prosecutors, and actually appoint the president at will, is hard to find even in dictatorships.” “Where are you going?”
Meanwhile, Geum Jeon received a warning from the Democratic Party Ethics Tribunal in May for abstaining from voting in the plenary session of the National Assembly late last year. Geum Jeon objected to this and requested a new trial, but as the decision to get her back continued to be postponed, she left the Democratic Party in October.
Journalist Ham Min-jung [email protected]
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