ID :
71095
Sun, 07/19/2009 - 20:21
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://oananews.org//node/71095
The shortlink copeid
Ruling party vows to handle media reform bills this week
(ATTN: ADDS Park Geun-hye's opposition to media bills in last 3 paras)
SEOUL, July 19 (Yonhap) -- The ruling Grand National Party (GNP) has set Sunday
as the "final deadline" for negotiations with the main opposition Democratic
Party (DP) on a set of disputed media reform bills, a ranking GNP official warned
Sunday.
"Today is the deadline for negotiations," the GNP's floor leader, Ahn Sang-soo,
said during a meeting of GNP lawmakers at the National Assembly.
Unless a compromise is reached within the day, Ahn said, his party will ask
Assembly Speaker Kim Hyong-o, a former GNP lawmaker, to invoke his authority and
call a vote on the bills.
Ahn's stern warning immediately raised concern about violent physical clashes
between lawmakers of the rival parties, as the DP is vehemently opposed to the
reform bills.
The conservative ruling party claims that the bills, centered on lifting a ban on
cross-ownership of print media and television stations, would promote competition
in the media industry, whereas the DP argues the reform drive reflects a
conservative push to control the media and will only benefit the country's major
conservative newspapers.
The rival parties have been at odds over the media reform bills for over eight
months.
The GNP appears pressed for time, as the ongoing extraordinary parliamentary
session will end on July 25. The next regular session will open in September.
"Whether a deal (with the opposition party) is reached or not, I will make every
effort to handle the media bills tomorrow. We can't wait indefinitely." Ahn said.
"I would like to put an end to the situation, concluding the eight months of
tedious strife."
His comments were apparently intended to ratchet up pressure on the DP, which is
worried about the possibility that the GNP might use their majority power to
railroad through the bills with the help of the National Assembly speaker.
The GNP controls 169 seats in the 299-member unicameral house, enough to pass the
bills through voting. The DP, which holds 84 seats, has vowed to mobilize all
possible means to block the GNP from attempting to unilaterally put the bills to
a vote.
Meanwhile, Park Geun-hye, former head of the GNP, expressed opposition to the
current media-related bills proposed by her party.
"If I attend (the National Assembly session for voting on the bills), it would be
to vote against those," she said.
Park, daughter of the late former South Korean president Park Chung-hee, leads
one of the two major GNP factions and she is said to be among the candidates to
become the country's next president. The other powerful faction is composed of
lawmakers loyal to President Lee Myung-bak.
lcd@yna.co.kr
(END)
SEOUL, July 19 (Yonhap) -- The ruling Grand National Party (GNP) has set Sunday
as the "final deadline" for negotiations with the main opposition Democratic
Party (DP) on a set of disputed media reform bills, a ranking GNP official warned
Sunday.
"Today is the deadline for negotiations," the GNP's floor leader, Ahn Sang-soo,
said during a meeting of GNP lawmakers at the National Assembly.
Unless a compromise is reached within the day, Ahn said, his party will ask
Assembly Speaker Kim Hyong-o, a former GNP lawmaker, to invoke his authority and
call a vote on the bills.
Ahn's stern warning immediately raised concern about violent physical clashes
between lawmakers of the rival parties, as the DP is vehemently opposed to the
reform bills.
The conservative ruling party claims that the bills, centered on lifting a ban on
cross-ownership of print media and television stations, would promote competition
in the media industry, whereas the DP argues the reform drive reflects a
conservative push to control the media and will only benefit the country's major
conservative newspapers.
The rival parties have been at odds over the media reform bills for over eight
months.
The GNP appears pressed for time, as the ongoing extraordinary parliamentary
session will end on July 25. The next regular session will open in September.
"Whether a deal (with the opposition party) is reached or not, I will make every
effort to handle the media bills tomorrow. We can't wait indefinitely." Ahn said.
"I would like to put an end to the situation, concluding the eight months of
tedious strife."
His comments were apparently intended to ratchet up pressure on the DP, which is
worried about the possibility that the GNP might use their majority power to
railroad through the bills with the help of the National Assembly speaker.
The GNP controls 169 seats in the 299-member unicameral house, enough to pass the
bills through voting. The DP, which holds 84 seats, has vowed to mobilize all
possible means to block the GNP from attempting to unilaterally put the bills to
a vote.
Meanwhile, Park Geun-hye, former head of the GNP, expressed opposition to the
current media-related bills proposed by her party.
"If I attend (the National Assembly session for voting on the bills), it would be
to vote against those," she said.
Park, daughter of the late former South Korean president Park Chung-hee, leads
one of the two major GNP factions and she is said to be among the candidates to
become the country's next president. The other powerful faction is composed of
lawmakers loyal to President Lee Myung-bak.
lcd@yna.co.kr
(END)