EDITORIAL: Freedom
calls for persistence
While tens of thousands of people rejoiced at various venues around the nation
on New Year’s Eve to celebrate the arrival of 2013, a few hundred people, the
majority of them students, huddled at Liberty Square in Taipei and later in
front of the Presidential Office, to show their concern for the future of their
country.
Braving cold temperatures, but for once spared the rain, the young Taiwanese
were holding their fourth protest in a little more than a month, and fifth since
September, against the threat of media monopolization and growing Chinese
influence within the industry.
As Taipei 101 and other landmarks lit up with colorful fireworks at the strike
of midnight, those young Taiwanese were discussing media freedoms and listening
to speeches by academics and other influential figures under the watchful eye of
police officers.
After nine hours at Liberty Square, the protesters adjourned to a spot in front
of the Presidential Office, where they launched a second sit-in, as rows of
police officers bearing riot shields looked on. Behind the centurions, thousands
of people who had trickled in since midnight in preparation for yesterday’s
flag-raising ceremony and President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) New Year address,
assembled before the Presidential Office.
As the student-led movement against media monsters has gained momentum, its
members have gone through ups and downs. They have faced lawsuits, been attacked
by media operated by the monster itself –– the Want Want China Times Group ––
and have been scolded by impeccably Confucian government officials. They have
also been warmly supported by tens of thousands of people overseas, by
legislators, academics and even older Taiwanese, who are often loath to
associate with younger people.
And while activist Tsay Ting-kuei (蔡丁貴), in a show of solidarity, served the
protesters ginger tea to help them stay warm, some revelers heckled the
protesters and berated them for causing disturbances over such a long period of
time.
Ironically, no sooner had those accusations been made than CTV, a TV station
operated by the Want Want China Times Group, was cutting out from its reruns of
the New Year’s Eve show in Greater Kaohsiung comments about media freedom by the
lead singer of Sodagreen (蘇打綠) on why the group chose to perform Chang Yu-sheng’s
(張雨生) song Life With No Cigarettes to Smoke (沒有菸抽的日子), an adaptation of a poem
by Chinese dissident Wang Dan (王丹) about the students’ movement in the lead-up
to the Tiananmen Square Massacre in 1989.
The complainers should remember that democracy doesn’t come free and that it
needs to be cultivated so that it doesn’t wither away. Taiwan is a democracy,
but that achievement cannot be taken for granted, and there are forces out there
that seek to undermine its vibrancy, if not to turn back the clock altogether.
Keeping democracy alive requires the same persistence and selflessness that
animated those who made the democratization of Taiwan possible during the 1970s
and 1980s.
How quickly people forget that the freedoms and liberties they enjoy in Taiwan
today are the direct result of young, idealistic individuals, not unlike those
who spent New Year’s Eve away from all the fun, who chose not to listen when
figures of authority told them their behavior was “inconvenient,” irritating, or
simply too dangerous. Luckily for all of us, the young protesters simply
shrugged off the criticism and continued with their efforts.
It will rain again, and it will get cold again. The anti-media monopoly
protesters will again be scolded, threatened and ridiculed. However, they must
also know that in that chorus of voices, there are several that cheer them on as
they make themselves heard, and as they fight for the ideals that serve as the
foundations of the country they call home.
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