2012 ELECTIONS: Ma
responsible for abuse of power: Tsai
‘PLEADING IGNORANCE’: ‘Next Magazine’ claimed
that the KMT had asked government agencies to mobilize civil servants to attend
a rally to support Ma Ying-jeou
By Chris Wang / Staff Reporter
Democratic Progressive Party
presidential candidate Tsai Ing-wen waves to bystanders while riding in a
motorcade in Yilan County yesterday.
Photo: Lo Pei-der, Taipei Times
President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) should “take
full responsibility” and “stop pleading ignorance” over a series of recent
events that show his administration has not remained neutral and has exploited
the state apparatus in the run-up to the presidential election, Democratic
Progressive Party (DPP) presidential candidate Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) said
yesterday.
As the president and the chairman of the ruling party, Ma “cannot say he doesn’t
know about them [events] or say the opposition party is using smear tactics when
it has presented evidence and it has good reason to voice its doubts” about the
government, the DPP chairperson said at a campaign stop in Yilan County.
Tsai was referring to a series of reports on the Ma administration’s alleged
illegal practices, including monitoring of the DPP’s campaign by intelligence
services, as well as embedded advertisements and campaigning for Ma’s
re-election bid by government agencies and civil servants.
“The current administration’s abuse of power is unprecedented. The president
should step forward, offer a clear explanation and stop pleading ignorance,”
Tsai said.
The Chinese-language Next Magazine carried a report yesterday that claims the
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) has asked eight government agencies to mobilize
at least 4,000 civil servants to attend a rally organized by Ma’s campaign on
Sunday.
DPP spokesperson Chen Chi-mai (陳其邁) told a press conference in Taipei that the
reported incident was “an obvious violation of administrative neutrality” and
the DPP would report the case to the Control Yuan.
“The entire administrative branch has now become part of Ma’s re-election
campaign,” DPP Legislator Tsai Huang-liang (蔡煌瑯) said.
Meanwhile, the DPP said Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) Minister Lai Shin-yuan
(賴幸媛) should step down for ordering the destruction of documents to cover up the
council placing embedded advertisements in a local news magazine.
The Chinese-language Liberty Times (the Taipei Times’ sister paper) yesterday
published a report that said Lai ordered that the documents be shredded after
she was questioned in the legislature by then-DPP legislator William Lai (賴清德)
about the advertisement — published in 2010 in the Chinese-language magazine The
Journalist.
In response to William Lai’s questioning, Lai Shin-yuan at the time pledged to
step down if her council had authorized embedded advertising in the magazine.
Embedded advertising — -a paid advertisement appearing in publications as news —
was legal at the time, but it had grown to such an extent that it drew
widespread condemnation. As a result, embedded advertising was banned in May
last year, with the Budget Act (預算法) specifying that “based on administrative
neutrality and maintaining freedom of the press and the rights of the people ...
policy advocacy should be clearly marked as advertising.”
Even though the documents were not shredded because the employee responsible
refused, Lai Shin-yuan should resign for lying and for violating the Archives
Act (檔案法) and the Public Servants’ Neutrality Act (公務人員行政中立法), DPP spokesperson
Chuang Ruei-hsiung (莊瑞雄) said.
Lai Shin-yuan, at a separate setting yesterday, rejected the accusation that she
ordered official documents destroyed.
“As you can see, documents No. 9900140 and No. 9900115 have been kept,” Lai
said, displaying the two original documents at a press conference.
Addressing the document that DPP lawmakers claim shows that Lai Shin-yuan
authorized the destruction of the documents, the council said she did not have
any intention of destroying the documents and only signed off on the document
authorizing their destruction because she thought it was standard protocol.
“Lai [Shin-yuan] lacks knowledge of the details related to the case because it
is not part of her duties as minister,” Mainland Affairs Council Deputy Minister
Liu Te-shun (劉德勳) said.
In related news, Tsai said the fact that more Taiwanese business leaders have
pledged their support to Ma’s campaign recently shows that the KMT is a
political party which “chooses to stand on the same side as big business,”
rather than ordinary people.
She made the comment in response to a reporter’s question about Evergreen Group
chairman Chang Yung-fa’s (張榮發) statement on Tuesday in which he said he “simply
cannot agree with the denial of the [so-called 1992] consensus by a ‘specific’
presidential candidate.”
Tsai said some business leaders made such comments because they have no
alternative, given their business operations in China.
“However, some of them have told me they hope their employees will support me,”
she added.
Aside from Chang, Hon Hai Precision Industry chairman Terry Gou (郭台銘), Ruentex
Financial Group chairman Samuel Yin (尹衍樑), Yulon Group chairman Kenneth Yen
(嚴凱泰), Formosa Plastics Corp president Wang Wen-yuan (王文淵) and Delta Electronics
chairman Bruce Cheng (鄭崇華) have also voiced their support for Ma.
Additional reporting by CNA
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