Taiwan Lawmakers Scuffle over Nuclear Plant Bill

Taiwan Lawmakers Scuffle over Nuclear Plant Bill

Taiwanese lawmakers brawled in parliament on Friday over a bill on the fate of a controversial and nearly-completed nuclear power plant.

Dozens of lawmakers from opposing camps clashed as they tried to seize the chamber’s podium and splashed water from cups and plastic bottles at each other as some shouted “Support for Nuke 4 harms children.”

Two male lawmakers from opposing parties were locked in a heated brawl and fell onto the floor while scuffling before they were pulled apart by others in footage broadcast live on television.

The parliament was scheduled to vote on Friday on whether to hold a referendum to stop the ongoing construction of the island’s fourth nuclear plant, also known as “Nuke 4,” near Taipei.

The opposition Democratic Progressive Party opposes the nuclear plant citing safety concerns while the ruling Kuomintang party warns that scrapping the facility will lead to insufficient power supply and hurt the economy.

Taiwan’s parliament was at one time notorious for mass brawls between legislators but over the last few years debates had remained relatively peaceful.

However, fighting broke out last month as legislators scuffled and threw coffee during a debate on whether to revise a controversial capital gains tax on share trading.

Concerns about the island’s nuclear facilities have been mounting since 2011, when the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan was hit by a tsunami sending its cooling systems into meltdown.

Anti-nuclear groups staged several mass street protests in the past few months to call on the government to immediately slam the brakes on the plant and move to completely stop using nuclear energy.

The fourth nuclear plant is about 90 percent completed and due to come online in 2015, according to its operator the state-owned Taiwan Power Company (Taipower).

Construction began in 1999 but the plant has been the subject of intense political wrangling ever since.

Like Japan, Taiwan is regularly hit by earthquakes. In September 1999 a 7.6-magnitude quake killed around 2,400 people in the deadliest natural disaster in the island’s recent history.

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