In a second
day of chaos, parliamentarians in Taiwan
wielded chairs above their heads and threw water balloons as they brawled over
a controversial infrastructure project.
On
Thursday, rival legislators grabbed each
other’s throats in fisticuffs during a
review of the budget for the project.
The plan is
one of President Tsai Ing-wen’s signature proposals and includes building light
rail lines, flood control measures and green energy facilities.
But the
opposition Kuomintang party is against the project, saying it favours cities
and counties faithful to Ms Tsai’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP)
and has been devised to secure support for the party ahead of next year’s
regional elections.
Critics have
also questioned the whopping NT$420 billion (S$19 billion) cost of the project.
Premier Lin
Chuan was prevented from delivering his report on the budget on Thursday after
a water balloon was thrown towards him and he left the chamber, with the
session called to a halt.
Mr Lin stood
on the sidelines again on Friday, unable to start speaking as chaos erupted
around him.
Opposition
lawmakers raised large padded office chairs above their heads, surrounding the
podium and tussling with rival legislators to prevent Mr Lin from presenting
the report as more water balloons were thrown.
The session
was then suspended.
One lawmaker
feeling unwell after the brawl was taken to the Parliament’s clinic.
Outside the
building, the Kuomintang’s acting chairman Lin Jung-tzer led a group of
legislators and protesters, chanting: “Send back the budget, defend Taiwan!”
Ms Tsai has
seen her popularity plummet to under 40 per cent from nearly 70 per cent when
she took office in May last year (2016) as her government attempts to tackle a
range of divisive issues from gay marriage to pension and judicial reforms.
Violent
protests erupted outside Parliament in April when opponents of pension reforms
attacked politicians and scuffled with police, prompting Ms Tsai to call for
calm and restraint.
Parliament
was also plunged into chaos late last year when opposing lawmakers brawled in
the chamber, as labour activists set off smoke bombs outside in protest at
proposed holiday cuts.
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