Wu Shu-jen spared jail due to health
PRISON POSTPONED:The former first lady will still have to
serve her full 17-and-a-half-year prison term once it is determined that she is
sufficiently fit to go to jail
Staff Writer, with CNA AND AFP
Former first lady Wu Shu-jen, center, is
helped into a wheelchair by her nurse as her son Greater Kaohsiung Councilor
Chen Chih-chung, right, looks on as Wu prepared to report to the Kaohsiung
District Prosecutors Office yesterday.
Photo: CNA
Former first lady Wu Shu-jen (吳淑珍) was taken home from a prison hospital
yesterday after Taichung Prison declined to admit her because of her poor
health.
The Kaohsiung Prosecutors’ Office ordered Wu’s son, Greater Kaohsiung Councilor
Chen Chih-chung (陳致中), to take his wheelchair-bound mother home after a medical
team at Pei Teh Hospital concluded that Wu was not well enough to serve her
sentence.
The office also ruled that Wu could not change her residence in Greater
Kaohsiung without permission and was prohibited from leaving the country.
The office said in a statement that it would send staff to visit Wu regularly to
see if her health had improved enough to enable her to begin her sentence.
Wang Chun-li (王俊力), a senior prosecutor at the office, said that as there was no
home detention system in Taiwan, Wu’s prison term remains unchanged.
“Wu’s incarceration has only been postponed indefinitely,” Wang said, adding
that her appearance at the office and the prison hospital yesterday would not be
deducted from her sentence.
Wang said Wu would be summoned to start serving her full 17-and-a-half-year jail
term whenever the prosecutors’ office decides she is well enough to stay behind
bars.
Wu was sent to the Taichung Prison-run Pei Teh Hospital earlier in the day to
assess her health.
Wu, who has been paralyzed from the waist down since she was run over by a truck
27 years ago, was greeted by hundreds of supporters as she arrived at the
hospital amid tight security.
Many shouted: “A-Chen is innocent” — referring to her by her nickname, and
briefly scuffled with police as they tried to get past barricades to enter the
hospital.
A team composed of 14 physicians from China Medical University in Taichung
assessed the state of Wu’s health in 10 categories as part of a series of
examinations that lasted from 10am to 2pm.
Yang Mei-tu (楊美都), deputy superintendent of the university, who took part in the
assessment, said Wu suffers from low blood pressure, an autonomic nervous system
disorder and heart disease.
“The medical team concluded that Wu’s chances of survival are unpredictable,
that she cannot take care of herself on a day-to-day basis and that it is
difficult to provide care for her,” Yang said.
Based on the team’s assessment, the Taichung Prison said it decided not to admit
Wu, in accordance with Article 11 of the Prison Act (監獄行刑法).
The decision to suspend her sentence triggered an angry response from Chinese
Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Chiu Yi (邱毅), who was among the first to
allege corruption against the Chen family.
“There are other people with chronic serious illnesses who are currently serving
their prison terms, and this is very unfair to them. Many people are angry and
this could trigger a political storm,” Chiu said.
Wu and her husband, former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁), were each sentenced
to a total of 19 years in jail by the Supreme Court in November last year for
taking bribes when Chen Shui-bian was president.
However, the Taiwan High Court ruled in December that Wu and Chen Shui-bian
should each serve 17-and-a-half years.
The former president, who had been held at a detention center since late 2008,
was transferred to Taipei Prison in Taoyuan County on Dec. 2 to begin serving
his sentence.
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