Election Committee Calls for Probe into Former Chief Over Ballot Shortages
Quick Look
- South Korea's National Election Commission's fact-finding committee recommended a criminal probe into its former chief and other officials over systemic failures causing ballot shortages in recent local elections.
- The committee called for a sweeping overhaul of the NEC.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
A fact-finding committee investigated ballot shortages during South Korea's recent local elections. The committee found systemic failures in the election management system.
SEOUL, June 19 (Yonhap) -- The National Election Commission's (NEC) fact-finding committee investigating ballot shortages during the recent local elections called for a criminal probe into the commission's former chief Friday, citing systemic failures in the election management system.
Cho Hyun-wook, chairperson of the committee, made the announcement during a briefing at the NEC headquarters in Gwacheon, south of Seoul, as the panel wrapped up a weeklong investigation conducted to determine the cause of the ballot shortages.
The committee recommended that former NEC Chairman Roh Tae-ak, who stepped down from his post over the debacle, and other key officials be referred for criminal investigation.
Cho also stressed that the NEC requires a sweeping overhaul tantamount to dismantling the organization.
"Given the systemic failures in the election management system exposed by the ballot shortage incident, the NEC requires sweeping reforms akin to dismantlement," she said.
According to the committee, 140 of the country's 14,288 polling stations requested and received additional ballot papers after anticipating shortages on election day. Of those, 91 used the additional ballots they received, while voting was at least temporarily disrupted at 26 polling stations due to ballot shortages.
The committee, launched on June 10, consisted of six members recommended by civic organizations, media, legal and academic communities.
Open Questions
- What specific actions will be taken against former officials?
- What are the details of the NEC's proposed overhaul?






