Frank Hsieh¡¦s ¡¥weibo¡¦
account suddenly shut down
By Chris Wang / Staff reporter
Former premier Frank Hsieh¡¦s (Áªø§Ê) account on the Chinese microblogging Web site
Sina Weibo (·s®ö·L³Õ) was suspended for unknown reasons yesterday, less than 24
hours after he made his account public.
He joined the Web site on Feb. 9, but only announced it on Tuesday during his
weekly radio talk show. Within hours, he had more than 60,000 followers.
Hsieh, who in October last year became the first senior Democratic Progressive
Party (DPP) politician to visit China, also became the first DPP veteran to join
the microblogging service.
In one of his weibo messages, Hsieh wrote: ¡§True freedom of speech is not
whether or not you¡¦re allowed to criticize government officials, but whether you
lose your freedom after speaking your mind.¡¨
Hsieh¡¦s account was suspended at about 2:30pm, with a message showing that the
account was not accessible due to unusual activity.
Hsieh said he did not know what happened, but that he would try to apply for a
new account.
Before the suspension, Hsieh told reporters that social media was a good
platform to get to know more about China¡¦s civil society.
DPP Legislator Tsai Chi-chang (½²¨ä©÷), one of the first DPP members to open a
weibo account, supported Hsieh¡¦s freedom of speech message in his own weibo post
yesterday.
DPP Chairman Su Tseng-chang (Ĭs©÷) said the incident showed how valuable
Taiwanese democracy and freedom are, and Taiwanese were best advised ¡§not to
have false expectations of the Chinese government.¡¨
In other news, Hsieh rebutted a local media report saying that he would be
meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping (²ßªñ¥) at an art exhibition in Beijing late
next month or in early April, along with former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT)
chairman Lien Chan (³s¾Ô) and former Taiwan Solidarity Union chairman Su Chin-chiang
(Ĭ¶i±j).
Hsieh said he declined an invitation from Su Chin-chiang, who is the president
of the Foundation of Taiwanese Culture, the exhibition organizer, adding that he
had no plans to visit China in the near future.
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