Activists look back on start of FAPA
By Chris Wang / Staff reporter
Former foreign minister Mark
Chen, former Democratic Progressive Party legislator Chai Trong-rong and Taiwan
Solidarity Union Legislator Hsu Chung-hsin, left to right, speak during a press
conference in Taipei yesterday to promote the upcoming 30th anniversary of the
Formosan Association for Public Affairs.
Photo: Liao Chen-hui, Taipei Times
Pioneering democracy activists yesterday
reminisced about the establishment and the achievements of the Formosan
Association for Public Affairs (FAPA) ahead of its 30th anniversary and said the
organization’s main goal would be safeguarding Taiwan’s sovereignty.
“In terms of diplomacy and protection of human rights in Taiwan, the association
has done more in the past 30 years than the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT)
administration has,” former Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) lawmaker Chai
Trong-rong (蔡同榮) and former foreign minister Mark Chen (陳唐山), FAPA’s first and
second presidents, told a press conference.
Chai and Chen, high-school classmates in Chiayi, had never imagined that they
would enjoy prominent political careers when they began advocating independence
for Taiwan in the US in the 1960s and established the FAPA in Los Angeles,
California, on Dec. 8, 1982.
Today, FAPA is a Washington-based lobbying organization made up of 53 chapters
and more than 3,000 members that promotes Taiwan-US relations and cooperation as
well as rights and interests of the Taiwanese.
According to Chai, the birth of FAPA was accidental because the overseas
Taiwanese students wanted to establish a radio station in Guam at first.
With the Taiwanese-American community’s success to help Taiwan gain a quota of
20,000 immigrants to the US per year — after the original quota of 20,000 was
given to China due to the establishment of diplomatic relations between China
and the US, democracy advocates in the US thought it was the right time to
establish an organization like FAPA.
“Young people are probably not aware of what the FAPA has done, because they are
too young to experience the Martial Law period and the days of serious
infringement of human rights in Taiwan. But I’m proud to say that FAPA had
played a pivotal role in helping Taiwan become a democracy it is today,” Chen
said.
However, Chen said the organization would have to shift its focus from human
rights to Taiwan’s sovereignty, as the latter had been eroded tremendously since
President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) took office in 2008.
Taiwan Solidarity Union Legislator Hsu Chung-hsin (許忠信) is scheduled to make a
speech at the ceremony of FAPA’s 30th anniversary, which former vice president
Annette Lu (呂秀蓮) and DPP representative to the US Joseph Wu (吳釗燮) would also
attend, at San Jose, California, on Saturday.
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