Investigators to Question Election Watchdog Officials Over Ballot Paper Shortages
Hızlı Bakış
- A joint team of police and prosecutors will question National Election Commission (NEC) officials regarding ballot paper shortages during the June 3 local elections.
- The NEC faced criticism after voting was temporarily suspended at 26 polling stations due to the shortages.
- Investigators are examining whether NEC officials exerted undue influence or mishandled the situation.
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A joint team of police investigators and prosecutors will question election watchdog officials over shortages of ballot papers during the June 3 local elections. The National Election Commission (NEC) has faced criticism for the shortages that temporarily suspended voting at 26 polling stations.
SEOUL, June 14 (Yonhap) -- A joint team of police investigators and prosecutors will soon question election watchdog officials over shortages of ballot papers during the June 3 local elections, legal sources said Sunday.
The expected move comes as the National Election Commission (NEC) has taken flak for the shortages that temporarily suspended voting at 26 polling stations, mostly in Seoul, during the elections earlier this month.
The team completed a search and seizure on NEC's servers on Saturday to secure internal messages and other records as part of a probe into the cause of the shortages.
The team plans to soon call in front-line NEC officials stationed in areas that experienced the shortages for questioning before summoning senior officials, including the NEC's former chief who resigned over the incident.
The investigation is focused on whether NEC officials exerted undue influence regarding the printing of the ballot papers and how they responded to the shortages.
Under the election law, civil servants are restricted from using their position to exert undue influence in an election.
The team raided seven locations, including the NEC's headquarters, on Thursday as part of the probe.
Açık Sorular
- What caused the ballot paper shortages?
- Did NEC officials exert undue influence?
- How will NEC respond to the investigation?






