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TWN Info Service on Free Trade Agreements 23 April 2009 Amid a rowdy scene in which ruling conservative Grand National Party members physically fought off opposition lawmakers trying to stop the proceedings, the committee passed the deal, which some studies have said will boost the two countries' $78 billion annual bilateral trade by as much as a quarter. But despite earlier
expectations that the wider assembly vote would be held soon after the
committee's approval, the GNP may not put the deal to a vote until June,
its floor leader was quoted as saying by The scene was reminiscent of a melee over the trade pact in parliament late last year, when sledgehammer-swinging opposition MPs tried to break through a barricade of office furniture and fire extinguisher-spraying ruling party legislative aides. The agreement has
broad support among members of But it could face fresh resistance from opposition MPs and the country's powerful farm lobby, who believe government compensation plans do not adequately address the losses that may hit farmers as protectionist measures are rolled back and competition intensifies. South Korean officials have said an early passage of the bill could add pressure on the U. S. Congress to ratify the deal. Congress has yet to begin debate on the pact. Two senior Obama called during
last year's campaign for the South Korean agreement to be renegotiated
to include more favorable provisions for The endorsement
by the National Assembly's Foreign Affairs, Trade and Unification Committee
came amid protests from opposition lawmakers who claim that the move
is premature and that The FTA will knock down tariff and non-tariff barriers between the two economies whose two-way trade reached $84.7 billion in 2008, according to the Korea International Trade Association.
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