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DPP protests professor's insults of President Chen

 

STAFF WRITER

 

An estimated 300 supporters of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) yesterday protested outside the Taichung-based Chungtai Institute of Health Sciences and Technology against a medical professor who had allegedly made bad jokes about President Chen Shui-bian while giving lectures to military officers.

 

Carrying various banners and led by legislators Wang Sing-nan and Lin Chung-mo, the angry DPP supporters demanded an apology from retired military official Pan Jung-kuang both to Chen and the public.

 


As Pan was not on campus yesterday, an official of the institute received the protesters and said the authorities are pondering measures to calm the uproar sparked by Pan's behavior.

 

Pan allegedly insulted Chen during four lectures in October. Pan was quoted as saying, "Chen is so idiotic that he has made all his followers crazy."

 

Pan allegedly further suggested that Chen should be caught for a bio-chemical experiment and his body sent to China for anatomization.

Supporters of the Democratic Progressive Party yesterday protest outside the Taichung-based Chungtai Institute of Health Sciences and Technology. The protest was aimed at a medical professor who allegedly had made bad jokes about President Chen Shui-bian.

 


 

Pan's remarks against Chen reportedly received warm applause from the military officers.

 

Though Pan later denied making such remarks, DPP Legislator Chang Ching-fang last week provided evidence that Pan had printed Chen's image on his teaching materials in a demonstration of how a bio-chemical attack would affect the human body.

 

Wang yesterday told reporters that his constituency service center had received several anonymous phone calls describing Pan as a "Chinese hero" and threatening to counter any attempt "that may hamper Pan."

 

Pan said in a telephonic interview that he refuses to apologize for something he had not said.

 

"I have already offered an apology for the uproar I have created on my official Web site, but I won't apologize for what I did not say," Pan said.

 

Pan also doubted that Wang had really received any threats.

 

"Being a great legislator, who would dare to threaten him? I think we should stop here.

 

"Don't let the [presidential] election campaign distort human nature to such an extent," Pan said.

 

 

Stench of death hangs over Bam

 

AXIS OF HELP: The US flew in its first shipment of aid, as American and Iranian officials made rare contact despite some two decades of frosty relations

 

REUTERS , BAM, IRAN

 

Iran's earthquake-devastated city of Bam was filled with the stench of death yesterday as top foreign rescuers warned hopes were fading for any more survivors from a disaster that killed at least 20,000 people.

 

US President George W. Bush's administration cast aside its branding of Iran as an "axis of evil" state to begin sending in military plane-loads of aid and held rare talks with a government it has shunned diplomatically for two decades.

 

 

 


From China to South Africa, Britain to Australia, nations rushed to respond to Iran's appeals and sent rescue workers, doctors, tents and cash to help deal with what appeared to be the world's most lethal earthquake in at least 10 years.

 

Cemeteries in Bam were overflowing with fully clothed corpses and hundreds of bodies had been tipped into trenches hollowed out by mechanical diggers, witnesses said.

 

The pre-dawn quake on Friday also injured about 30,000 people when it flattened about 70 percent of the mostly mud-brick buildings in the ancient Silk Road city.

The hand of a victim covered by rubble in Bam, southeast Iran, on Saturday after a powerful earthquake hit the region Friday. The quake left at least 20,000 dead and 30,000 injured with more casualties feared. More than three-quarters of Bam was flattened by the quake which was rated 6.7 on the Richter scale by the US Geological Survey.


 

Bam airport was converted into a sprawling, makeshift hospital and rubble-strewn pavements were lined with injured, some on intravenous drips.

 

Witnesses saw some looting when vans of young men armed with pistols and Kalashnikovs drove into Bam and stole Red Crescent tents, as residents said relief efforts were chaotic.

 

"There is no organization. Whoever is stronger takes the aid," Mehdi Dehghani said.

 

President Mohammad Khatami said Iran could not cope on its own, as authorities battled to accommodate thousands of homeless people on a second bitterly cold night.

 

"Everyone is doing their best to help, but the disaster is so huge that I believe no matter how much is done we cannot meet the people's expectations," Khatami said on state television.

 

The Interior Ministry confirmed on Saturday the death toll stood at 20,000, but the chaos and scale of the disaster made it difficult for officials to produce exact casualty figures.

 

Interior Minister Abdolvahed Mousavi-Lari said he could not make any forecasts about the final toll.

 


But he said: "In a city of something under 100,000 people, 70 percent of buildings collapsed. With this scale of damage, the number of dead and injured will be very high."

 

Officials said many survivors should have been in tents by late on Saturday, but witnesses said a number spent the night in the open among palm groves around Bam, burning cardboard and any other material they could find to fend off the cold.

A man on Saturday carries two brothers who were killed when their home collapsed during Friday's earthquake in Bam.


 

The quake measured 6.3 on the Richter scale and struck early on Friday when many people were at home asleep in Bam, some 1,000km southeast of the capital Tehran.

 

Ari Vakkilainnen, leading a Finnish rescue team, said only 30 people were dug out alive overnight.

 

"I do not think that many people are alive because of the structure of the buildings," he said. "Someone could still be alive after 72 hours, but if they are losing blood they need water."

 

 

The pillars of the US' Taiwan policy

 

By Nat Bellocchi

 

The present US administration says its policy on cross-strait relations is based on the three communiques and the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA). As a demonstration of how unbalanced US policy was in the past, the current inclusion of the TRA with the three communiques is a step forward for those of us who suffered its omission for so many years. (The six assurances, one hopes, will one day also be included).

 

So much for greater clarity. Under that broad cover, the US insists on a peaceful resolution of the cross-strait issue, and encourages dialogue between the two sides of the Strait. It opposes provocations (mostly on the part of Taiwan, it's an easier target), and any movement toward independence (only by Taiwan, but otherwise it is opaque). Most importantly, the US now places greatest emphasis on maintaining the status quo and opposing any unilateral change to it.

 

Under that cover, clarity becomes somewhat diluted. An insistence on a peaceful resolution, for example, is clear and supported on all sides. That is if we are talking about a military attack. According to press reports, the US has made clear to China that any military attack or coercion will inevitably "involve" the US. Coercion, however, is a bit more complicated and not easily handled by the US.

 

Encouraging a dialogue between China and Taiwan is a good objective most would agree with. Unfortunately, China does not agree, unless of course results favorable to them are guaranteed. In any event, American efforts to interfere in Taiwan's moves toward a more distinct entity of its own, or in strengthening its democratic political system, even with no more a purpose than to lower tensions, undermines the pressure on China to talk.

 

Opposition to provocations is normally thought to include both sides of the Strait. Realistically, however, it falls mainly on Taiwan. China defines provocative actions by Taiwan very broadly. Now increasingly this includes domestic political changes in Taiwan that are fundamental to democratic principles. Taiwan just recently began to publicly evoke charges that China's missile deployments are provocative. While Washington sees this mostly as an election campaign gimmick, it also has a purpose in alerting the Taiwanese public to threats they have tended to ignore.

 

More recently, under pressure from China, the US has stated its opposition to any movements toward independence by Taiwan. This came at a time when Taiwan was legislating the use of referendums.

 

Aside from this position held by China, trying to judge what constitutes a "movement toward independence" is hardly clear. China, for example, will consider any referendum or changes to Taiwan's constitution as provocative. In principle, that should be unacceptable to the US. It appears to be a policy that could cause problems for the US, and Taiwan as well.

 

We have been told on several occasions that one of the pillars of US policy regarding the cross-strait issue is that there must be no unilateral change to the status quo.

 

Status quo, according to the dictionary, means "the existing state or condition" (Random House), or "the state in which anything is" (Webster). The state in which we find the broad issue of cross-strait relations is awesome. Here are some of the elements of today's status quo in the Taiwan Strait.

 

The sovereignty of Taiwan is claimed by China; that claim is accepted by many countries in the world at China's behest; Japan, which has a critical interest in the Taiwan Strait, avoids addressing the issue; the US is unable to accept China's claim as the Congress would not permit it; a few small countries recognize Taiwan's sovereignty; and many if not most in Taiwan believe Taiwan already has it.

 

Taiwan is a democracy that has elected leaders which gives them unqualified legitimacy; it is the 14th largest trader in the world; has a foreign exchange reserve that is one of the largest in the world; and has an economy that is internationalized but also one of the largest foreign investors in China. At the same time, China's continuing and vigorous effort to isolate Taiwan results in most international organizations, including financial ones, rejecting Taiwan's membership, even as an observer.

 

The state of affairs on Taiwan includes a gradual defining of its own identity. Politically, it has not only irreversibly become a democracy, but chosen a direct type of democracy that puts it even further removed from the political system in China.

 

Then there is the state of Taiwan's capability to defend itself. As China modernizes its military, putting top priority on a credible capability to defeat Taiwan before the US could intervene, Taiwan (and the US to the extent it must implement the Taiwan Relations Act) seeks ways to offset that threat. China keeps open its threat to attack or coerce Taiwan, including among many other things, almost 500 missiles aimed at Taiwan.

 

So the main pillar of America's policy on cross-strait issues is maintaining the status quo. China supports this, as was demonstrated in Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao's visit to Washington. Indeed, China has good reason to support this position. Under the status quo, China can continue to expand its missile deployment opposite Taiwan, continue to block Taiwan's participation in international institutions and have its definition of what is provocative accepted.

 

Taiwan, on the other hand, while it gets critical help from the US in offsetting China's military threat, and some limited support in its effort to participate in the international community, must otherwise largely work alone to strengthen its ability to prevent a unification that the majority of the people do not want. What it can do on its own is to demonstrate its democratic progress and expand its grassroots effort to establish a national identity. China-determined provocations try to undermine this.

 

America's purpose in maintaining the status quo is to block unilateral efforts to attain either unification or independence from erupting into war. It is seldom put this way, which is unfortunate as it would be better understood. It is the management of the many unresolved issues under that more clearly defined status quo, however, that will continue to be difficult for America, and favor China.

 

Nat Bellocchi is the former chairman of the American Institute in Taiwan and is now a special adviser to the Liberty Times Group.The views expressed in this article are his own.

 

 

 

 


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