South Korea approves extended Iraq deployment (Agencies) Updated: 2005-01-01 16:25
South Korea's parliament on Friday approved extending the mission of its
3,600 troops in Iraq for another year.
The National Assembly approved the plan in a 161-63 vote with 54 abstentions
just before the troops' previous mandate in Iraq expired at midnight.
South Korea completed deploying its forces to the Kurdish town of Irbil last
month, becoming the third-largest contributor of troops to the coalition after
the United States and Britain. The South Korean contingent is not involved in
combat operations and consists mostly of engineers and medics who repair roads
and offer free medical services.
 Lawmakers of
the main opposition Grand National Party occupy the place of the chairman
of the National Assembly in Seoul Friday, Dec. 31, 2004. South
Korea will be left without a national budget and its
troops deployed in Iraq on an unauthorized mission if
a weekslong deadlock in parliament isn't resolved before midnight Friday.
[AP] | The deployment to Iraq has been sensitive, and the South Korean government
called for a news blackout on the troops' movements as they arrived in Iraq,
citing security concerns. In early December, President Roh Moo-hyun made a
surprise visit to Irbil to encourage the soldiers.
The Seoul government decided in November to extend the deployment for another
year until the end of 2005, but that move required parliamentary approval. The
vote was delayed repeatedly this month while lawmakers argued over a series of
unrelated reform bills, including the ruling Uri Party's controversial plan to
scrap the anti-communist National Security Law.
The parliament postponed a vote on that bill Friday until the new year.
Also Friday, lawmakers approved the national budget for next year ahead of
the midnight deadline — averting what would have been the need for an emergency
budget for the first time in South Korea's history.
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