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Taiwan lawmakers scuffle during N-plant debate

Published: 03 Aug 2013 - 02:55 am | Last Updated: 02 Feb 2022 - 01:57 am

TAIPEI: Taiwanese lawmakers hurled water and wrestled each other to the floor of the island’s parliament yesterday in a brawl which broke out during a debate on the fate of a controversial nuclear plant.

Dozens of lawmakers from opposing camps clashed as they tried to seize the chamber’s podium and splashed water from cups and plastic bottles at each other as some shouted “Support for Nuke 4 harms children.”

Two scuffling lawmakers from opposing parties fell onto the floor before they were pulled apart by others in footage broadcast live on television.

The parliament was scheduled to vote on whether to hold a referendum to stop the ongoing construction of the island’s fourth nuclear plant, also known as “Nuke 4” near Taipei. 

But the voting was likely to be postponed to next week after the fighting, said the opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).

The DPP opposes the nuclear plant, citing safety concerns while the ruling Kuomintang party warns that scrapping the facility will lead to insufficient power supply and hurt the economy.

Taiwan’s parliament was once notorious for mass brawls between legislators but over the last few years debates had remained relatively peaceful.

However, fighting broke out in June as legislators scuffled and threw coffee during a debate on whether to revise a controversial capital gains tax on share trading.

The latest incident sparked heated criticism from the public on Internet forums and social networking websites.

While the lawmakers fought, about 100 environmental activists staged a sit-in outside the parliament, chanting slogans opposing nuclear energy.

AFP