u/CustomerFlashy3395

Thank you for all the attention this post has received.
▲ 27 r/seoul

Thank you for all the attention this post has received.

I honestly did not expect this many people to care.

I wrote this post because I wanted more people to know what is currently happening in South Korea. I am not trying to spread conspiracy theories about election fraud.

What I wanted to discuss is whether this kind of election procedure is acceptable.

Some people commented that it no longer matters because Oh Se-hoon won. But my point does not change just because the PPP candidate won.

This is about the shortage of ballot papers, the attitude of the NEC, and the lack of proper election management.

I am writing this because some comments are bringing up issues that have nothing to do with my original point.

+ For those leaving negative comments, I suggest visiting Olympic-ro 4-gil 42.

u/CustomerFlashy3395 — 6 days ago
▲ 205 r/seoul

Important notice

Before the text I don't have a great speach with English. I got helped with chat gpt So there might be wrong sentence.

This is an important matter. If you live in South Korea, you may already know that June 3 was the day of a major election. However, voting was suspended at several polling stations in Seoul, including twelve locations in Songpa District, one in Gangnam District, and one in Gwangjin District, due to a shortage of ballot papers.

Despite this, the vote counting process continued. In some cases, ballot papers reportedly arrived while counting was already underway, meaning voting and counting were taking place at the same time.

This is not the first time that voting has been disrupted because of a ballot shortage. A similar situation occurred in Germany in 2021, which ultimately led to a repeat election.

Such incidents should never happen in a free democratic country like South Korea. Demonstrations are currently taking place in Jamsil, Songpa District, and I hope more people become aware of what has happened.

u/CustomerFlashy3395 — 7 days ago