Investigators to question election watchdog officials over ballot shortages

A joint police and prosecution team will soon question National Election Commission officials over ballot paper shortages during the June 3 local elections.

Ballot shortages during the June 3 local elections temporarily suspended voting at 26 polling stations, mostly in Seoul. The investigation team raided seven locations including the NEC headquarters on June 11 and seized server records on June 13.

The probe focuses on whether officials exerted undue influence on ballot printing and how they responded to the shortages. Front-line officials will be questioned first, followed by senior officials including the former chief who resigned.

Protests at a vote counting site in Seoul's Jamsil district continued for a 10th day on June 14, with around 600 people gathered and blocking entrances to sports offices.

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Police raiding the election commission headquarters over ballot shortages.
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Police raid Election Commission over ballot shortages in local elections

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Police raided the National Election Commission headquarters and local offices on Thursday over ballot shortages that disrupted last week's local elections.

Police raided the National Election Commission on June 11 over ballot shortages that disrupted voting at 26 polling stations during the June 3 local elections, as protests demanding a rerun continue.

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Protests over ballot shortages during local elections entered their second day in Seoul on Saturday, with thousands surrounding a vote-counting facility and demanding a new election.

South Koreans head to polling stations Wednesday to elect local government leaders and council members in the ninth nationwide local elections.

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Early voting for South Korea's June 3 local elections and by-elections opened Friday across 3,571 stations nationwide. The vote is widely seen as a referendum on President Lee Jae Myung's first year.

Supreme Court Chief Justice Cho Hee-dae accepted the resignation of National Election Commission chairperson Roh Tae-ak on June 8. The move follows ballot shortages that disrupted voting in parts of Seoul during the June 3 local elections.

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South Korea's ruling Democratic Party secured a landslide in Wednesday's local elections, winning 12 of 16 key races and strengthening President Lee Jae Myung's mandate.

 

 

 

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