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Punches, water balloons thrown in Taiwan parliament melee

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Taiwanese lawmakers threw punches and water balloons inside the legislature on Friday, the third parliamentary brawl in a fortnight, over the nomination of the head of a top government watchdog.

DPP legislators donned plastic raincoats and used cardboard shields to protect themselves from the w...
DPP legislators donned plastic raincoats and used cardboard shields to protect themselves from the water balloons
Sam Yeh, AFP

A legislator from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) was caught on camera punching an opposition party member during a vote on nominee Chen Chu.

Kuomintang (KMT) lawmakers later threw water balloons at the speakers' podium, forcing their DPP colleagues to don plastic raincoats and hold up cardboard shields.

The parliament in Taipei was once notorious for mass brawls, and has been the scene of frequent protests.

Scuffles broke out over reform policies and pension cuts when President Tsai Ing-wen first took office four years ago.

Lu Yu-ling from the KMT tears up ballots as the party protests against the Control Yuan nomination
Lu Yu-ling from the KMT tears up ballots as the party protests against the Control Yuan nomination
Sam Yeh, AFP

Such confrontations had since subsided, but in the last fortnight they have returned with abandon over the decision to nominate Chen, 70, to head the Control Yuan, an investigatory agency that monitors the other branches of government.

The KMT is opposed to her appointment, which requires approval from the DPP-dominated parliament.

Legislators brawl in the chamber
Legislators brawl in the chamber
Sam Yeh, AFP

The party also claimed that 24 out of 27 people nominated for membership of the Control Yuan have close ties with the DPP in the "worst ever" nomination list for the agency.

"We demand a new review and we demand the nominations be withdrawn," KMT chairman Johnny Chiang told supporters gathered outside the Control Yuan building, also in the capital.

Chen is a long-time human rights advocate and was jailed for six years when Taiwan was a dictatorship under the KMT.

Scenes of parliamentary confrontation had subsided in recent years  before the most recent outbreak
Scenes of parliamentary confrontation had subsided in recent years, before the most recent outbreak
Sam Yeh, AFP

Despite the morning's melee, voting went ahead and Chen's nomination was approved.

She has said she will quit the DPP after her nomination is approved, to maintain the impartiality of the position, and accused the opposition of smearing her with unfounded accusations.

Taiwanese lawmakers threw punches and water balloons inside the legislature on Friday, the third parliamentary brawl in a fortnight, over the nomination of the head of a top government watchdog.

DPP legislators donned plastic raincoats and used cardboard shields to protect themselves from the w...

DPP legislators donned plastic raincoats and used cardboard shields to protect themselves from the water balloons
Sam Yeh, AFP

A legislator from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) was caught on camera punching an opposition party member during a vote on nominee Chen Chu.

Kuomintang (KMT) lawmakers later threw water balloons at the speakers’ podium, forcing their DPP colleagues to don plastic raincoats and hold up cardboard shields.

The parliament in Taipei was once notorious for mass brawls, and has been the scene of frequent protests.

Scuffles broke out over reform policies and pension cuts when President Tsai Ing-wen first took office four years ago.

Lu Yu-ling from the KMT tears up ballots as the party protests against the Control Yuan nomination

Lu Yu-ling from the KMT tears up ballots as the party protests against the Control Yuan nomination
Sam Yeh, AFP

Such confrontations had since subsided, but in the last fortnight they have returned with abandon over the decision to nominate Chen, 70, to head the Control Yuan, an investigatory agency that monitors the other branches of government.

The KMT is opposed to her appointment, which requires approval from the DPP-dominated parliament.

Legislators brawl in the chamber

Legislators brawl in the chamber
Sam Yeh, AFP

The party also claimed that 24 out of 27 people nominated for membership of the Control Yuan have close ties with the DPP in the “worst ever” nomination list for the agency.

“We demand a new review and we demand the nominations be withdrawn,” KMT chairman Johnny Chiang told supporters gathered outside the Control Yuan building, also in the capital.

Chen is a long-time human rights advocate and was jailed for six years when Taiwan was a dictatorship under the KMT.

Scenes of parliamentary confrontation had subsided in recent years  before the most recent outbreak

Scenes of parliamentary confrontation had subsided in recent years, before the most recent outbreak
Sam Yeh, AFP

Despite the morning’s melee, voting went ahead and Chen’s nomination was approved.

She has said she will quit the DPP after her nomination is approved, to maintain the impartiality of the position, and accused the opposition of smearing her with unfounded accusations.

AFP
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