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South Korea’s Cabinet approves motion to amend texts in Constitution

Seoul, April 6 (IANS) South Korea’s Cabinet approved a motion Monday to amend some texts in the Constitution, setting the stage for the National Assembly to vote on the proposed amendment, and, if passed by lawmakers, the amendment will be put to a national referendum.

The move comes after 187 lawmakers from the ruling Democratic Party and five minor parties jointly proposed the bill on Friday to tighten the requirements for declaring martial law and incorporate the spirit of past pro-democracy movements into the Constitution. The main opposition People Power Party has not joined the move, reports Yonhap news agency.

With the Cabinet’s approval, President Lee Jae Myung is required to put up a public notice of the proposed amendment for at least 20 days to give citizens time to review it.

The National Assembly is then required to vote on the bill within 60 days of the public notice, where it must secure a two-thirds majority to pass.

If the bill is approved between May 4 and 10, a national referendum could be held alongside the June 3 local elections. The amendment must win both a majority turnout and majority approval to be finalised.

The proposal aims to include the 1980 pro-democracy uprising in Gwangju and the 1979 Busan-Masan pro-democracy protests in the preamble. It currently states that the country inherits the spirit of the April 19 revolution in 1960, which overthrew South Korea’s first president, Rhee Syng-man, over election fraud.

The bill also seeks to tighten the requirements for declaring martial law, requiring the president to obtain parliamentary approval without delay and stipulating that if the National Assembly rejects the declaration or fails to approve it within 48 hours, the martial law will be immediately nullified.

During a Cabinet meeting, Lee called for bipartisan support for the constitutional revision to reflect social changes since the Constitution was last amended in 1987.

“There is broad consensus on the need to revise the Constitution to better reflect changes in society nearly 40 years after its last revision,” he said. “Bipartisan cooperation is needed to advance constitutional amendments to the best extent possible.”

He said there appears to be no disagreement over reflecting key pro-democracy movements in the Constitution’s preamble and tightening requirements for imposing martial law, expressing hope that the referendum will take place in time for the local elections.

“On issues that all political forces have explicitly agreed upon, it appears possible to pursue constitutional amendments alongside the upcoming local elections,” he said.

–IANS

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