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SEOUL, Nov. 16 (Xinhuanet) -- Thousands of South
Korean farmers clashed with police in Seoul on Tuesday in a rally against the
government's move to open the rice market wider, reported South Korean English
newspaper The Korean Herald on Wednesday.
At least 80 farmers and 20 police
officers were injured in the riot rally, the paper quoted local police as
saying.
Wielding steel pipes and bamboo sticks, the
protesters pushed back the police cordon in front of the National Assembly in
central Seoul, as they attempted to break into the building. Riot police blocked
them by using water cannons.
The scuffle erupted when about 10,000 farmers from
across the nation gathered in front of the National Assembly, to block a
parliamentary ratification of the rice import deal signed with nine countries,
said the newspaper.
The South Korean legislature body is expected to vote
on the bill on Nov. 23.
"The government should establish clear
countermeasures and fundamental measures to ensure the sustainable development
of the local agricultural industry before it sends the bill to the Assembly,"
the (South) Korean Peasants League, which organized the protest, said in a
statement.
Moon Gyeong-sik, chairman of the South Korean
peasants organization, threatened to stage sporadic rallies across the country
if the government defies their demands.
The coalition of eight farmers' unions already
planned to hold a mass demonstration in Busan on Friday and in Seoul next
Monday. The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Economic Leaders' Meeting
is to be held on this Friday and Saturday.
Last year, South Korea agreed with nine
rice-exporting countries to increase its import quota to 7.96 percent from the
current 4 percent by 2014 and to permit up to 30 percent of imported rice to be
sold directly to consumers by 2010.
Seoul has maintained that the agreement must be
passed soon if South Korea is to meet its obligations. Enditem |