Owner of bulldozed
house found dead
DOUBLE TRAGEDY: Chang Sen-wen’s body was found
close to where his Dapu home once stood and friends blamed the Miaoli County
commissioner for his death
By Loa Iok-sin / Staff reporter
Neighbors comfort Peng Hsiu-chun,
center, wife of Chang Sen-wen, after her husband’s body was found in a ditch in
Miaoli County’s Dapu Borough yesterday.
Photo: Peng Chien-li, Taipei Times
Democratic Progressive Party
Chairman Su Tseng-chang, second right, comforts Chang Sen-wen, center, on Aug. 9
after Chang’s house and pharmacy in Miaoli County’s Dapu Borough were
demolished.
Photo: Peng Chien-li, Taipei
A 60-year-old resident of Dapu Borough
(大埔), Miaoli County, whose house was forcibly torn down by the Miaoli County
Government in July, was found dead in an irrigation channel near his former home
yesterday in the latest in a series of incidents that have drawn attention to
the county in recent months.
With family and friends in tears, the body of Chang Sen-wen (張森文) was lifted out
of the water by rescuers yesterday afternoon.
“Who killed you? Tell me who killed you?” Chang’s wife, Peng Hsiu-chun (彭秀春),
cried out when she saw her husband’s body, while their son, Chang Yuan-hao (張元豪)
stood to the side, repeatedly calling out for his father.
“I was quite worried when I woke up in the morning and did not see my dad,
because he would usually come back home at about 6am — no later than 7am — from
his morning walk,” Chang Yuan-hao told reporters in the morning before his
father’s body was discovered.
“It was a bit weird, because he had left his wallet and cellphone at home,” he
added.
After receiving a telephone call from Chang Yuan-hao at about 10am, the local
police station checked surveillance camera footage of the area where the Changs
now live, and saw Chang Sen-wen walking southward by himself at about 2:30am.
Searching along the road, the police found his body in an irrigation channel,
about 200m from where his demolished house once stood.
Speaking on Chang Sen-wen’s death when asked by the media at a separate setting,
Miaoli County Commissioner Liu Cheng-hung (劉政鴻) — who ordered the demolition of
the Changs’ house and pharmacy on July 18 — said he was mourning, though only
after being reminded of the tragedy by journalists.
“For the, uh, I should say, accident, that happened to Mr Chang, I would say,
uh, I would lament it, I would lament it,” Liu said. “As maybe I should say, I
mourn his death, I mourn his death, yes, that’s a better term, I mourn his
death.”
Despite being rebuffed by the Changs when he asked to visit them, Liu insisted
on going to their house to pay his respects to the deceased, leading to clashes
between police officers escorting him and supporters of the Changs.
Chanting “Liu the killer,” the crowd pushed Liu and the police out of the house,
throwing bottles and shoes at him before slamming the door shut.
Liu left after getting hit by a shoe.
At press time, the police and the prosecutor were still investigating the cause
of Chang Sen-wen’s death.
However, netizens and supporters of the Changs have blamed Liu for his death.
Huang Fu-ji (黃福記), a former resident of one of the four homes demolished in
July, told reporters that Liu should receive the death penalty and be gunned
down.
Chang Sen-wen had been mentally and physically on the edge of collapse since
before the forced demolition on July 18.
Two other Dapu residents had committed suicide earlier in protest against the
demolitions to make way for a science park.
Additional reporting by Rich Chang
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