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In
2008, a journalist attacked the most powerful politician in
the world with his shoes. But politicians fend off attacks from
one another as well. In the subcontinent, it usually happens
in parliament. Pakistanis and Indians alike are familiar with
their elected representatives brawling like puffy-chested thugs.
A look at foreign parliaments, though, proves that legislative
violence is not the exclusive pastime of South Asian policy
makers. Italy, Russia, Taiwan and even the UK and US have in
the past seen their government debating sessions degenerate
into fisticuffs. Taiwan, in fact, has had many episodes. In
2007, 24 angry members of the ruling party descended on a partisan
speaker of the House, resulting in opposition members coming
to his rescue. The melee combined punching, wrestling and spraying
water, and sent one MP to the hospital with a head injury.
Here’s
a look at 2008’s top five politician v/s politician brawls.
1-
South Korea
Take
one unpopular piece of legislation, throw in some angry opposition
MPs, complicate things with a locked room and then add some
power tools and fire extinguishers, and out comes the most outrageous
parliamentary rumble of 2008.
Shut
out from a parliamentary committee room in South Korea’s
National Assembly building where the ruling Grand National Party
was unilaterally submitting a South Korea-US free-trade bill,
emotional opposition politicians tried to break down the barricaded
doors with a sledgehammer and chainsaw in November. They split
one door only to find another behind. Still amassed in the corridor,
the raging MPs, who were set on defeating the bill, were eventually
counter-attacked by security guards spraying fire hoses and
fire extinguishers, turning the scene into a full-on chaotic
and bloody brawl.
2-
Saxony
Neo-Nazis
don’t have a peace-loving reputation. Their violence,
however, is usually reserved for those they deem genetically
inferior. So when two members of the German neo-Nazi National
Democratic Party started fighting each other in the regional
Saxon parliament in Dresden, it was clear white supremacists
were suffering from a lack of healthy outlets to vent their
anger. The fight took place on November 12, between Jürgen
Gansel and Peter Naumann, who have been reportedly nursing a
long-simmering feud. Gansel recently made headlines when he
said Barack Obama’s election victory was “a declaration
of war” on “pure” nations. By the way, Gansel
was punched in the face.
3-
Iraq
The US surge in Iraq seems to be impotent in the war-torn country’s
parliament. A debate on the three-year security agreement between
the two countries turned ugly when security guards reportedly
roughed up an MP loyal to Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. Battered
legislator Ahmad al-Massoudi is part of a bloc of 30 MPs espousing
the cleric’s demand that US troops go home. Because the
audio and video feed from the session was cut as Massoudi stood
up and denounced the pact on November 19, details of the scuffle
remain unconfirmed. There were reports, however, that Massoudi
charged the speaker of the House, attempting to rip the draft
agreement from his hands. As chaos exploded inside the chamber,
elsewhere in the parliament building, Iraqi guards scurried
to lock doors, in an attempt to prevent MPs from leaving.
4-
Azad Jammu and Kashmir
Raising
abuse of power issues against sitting premiers is risky business
in Pakistan. Tahir Khokhar found out the hard way when two members
of Azad Jammu and Kashmir’s ruling party attacked him
during a March 6 legislative assembly session. Khokhar, a member
of the MQM, was leapt upon and slapped when he broached the
subject of a government-funded foreign trip made by the son
of AJK Prime Minister Sardar Attique Ahmad Khan and what Khokhar
called three “relatively unknown” women. Opposition
members protested the violent outburst by standing on their
seats and shouting before walking out.
5-
Ukraine
An
on-going power struggle in Ukraine’s parliament turned
physical on November 12, when lawmakers vowed to oust Speaker
Arseny Yatseniuk. The vote against Yatseniuk, an ally of President
Yushchenko, was so charged that when 10 MPs from his own party
sided with opposition members, making his dismissal possible,
testosterone overpowered good judgement and punches flew. The
fight gravitated towards Yatseniuk, as rival factions scuffled
near the speaker’s podium.
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