| Ma waging war on 
media, pundit says
 ‘SOFT WHITE TERROR’: Nan Fang Shuo sees the 
rejection by the ‘China Times’ of his recent column as evidence of a campaign by 
Ma to turn the media against Wang
 
 By Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff reporter
 
 President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) has led Taiwan back to an era of “Soft White 
Terror” by bringing the media in Taiwan to its knees, political pundit Nan Fang 
Shuo (南方朔) said yesterday, adding: “I am a victim.”
 
 Nan Fang Shuo told the Taipei Times by telephone yesterday that the 
Chinese-language China Times has lied about why it declined to run his column on 
Sept. 17 when the newspaper explained to Hong Kong’s Ming Pao over its rejection 
of the article.
 
 In an op-ed article published by the Ming Pao yesterday, Nan Fang Shuo said: “I 
was a testimony” to President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) new strategy to wage a media 
battle against Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng (王金平) because Ma will not 
reconcile himself to the fact that Wang still retains the speakership.
 
 Nan Fang Shuo told the Ming Pao that the rejection of his column resulted from 
Ma telling managers of media outlets in support of the Chinese Nationalist Party 
(KMT) not to run articles critical of Ma’s moves against Wang.
 
 In what the media have termed the “September political strife” between Ma and 
Wang, Wang on Sept. 13 won a court reprieve from the KMT Central Evaluation and 
Discipline Committee’s decision, facilitated by Ma, to revoke his membership to 
strip him of his speakership over his alleged role in an undue influence case 
that surfaced on Sept. 6.
 
 While the media turned to Typhoon Usagi during the four-day holiday for this 
year’s Mid-Autumn Festival, Ma has not relented in his efforts to oust Wang, but 
turned to the media to continue the battle, Nan Fang Shuo said in his article in 
the Ming Pao.
 
 Ma has returned Taiwan to the “White Terror,” except that it was not done in a 
coercive manner, relying instead on persuasive repression as Ma has exerted 
pressure on news media to force them to take his side in his plan to remove Wang 
from his position, Nan Fang Shuo said.
 
 The new strategy came after Ma’s heavy-handed methods to deal with Wang during 
the initial stage of the incident backfired and pushed down his approval rating 
to 9.2 percent, Nan Fang Shuo said.
 
 Nan Fang Shuo said the column rejected by the China Times called for Ma to “fire 
the gang of four” as a way to “apologize to Wang Jin-pyng.”
 
 Nan Fang Shuo said that Representative to the US King Pu-tsung (金溥聰), Premier 
Jiang Yi-huah (江宜樺), then-deputy secretary-general Lo Chih-chiang (羅智強) and 
Prosecutor-General Huang Shih-ming (黃世銘) were the “gang of four” involved in the 
“premeditated plan” against Wang.
 
 The reason the “gang of four” targeted Wang was to shift responsibility for the 
poor performance of the government from Ma to Wang as rumors have spread around 
among KMT local supporters that Wang has long sided with the Democratic 
Progressive Party in the legislature in boycotting the Ma administration’s 
policies, Nan Fang Shuo said.
 
 Wang was made a “scapegoat for the failure of Ma administration,” he added.
 
 Nan Fang Shuo said he wrote the article “with good intentions” because that 
would more quickly bring an end to political turmoil.
 
 In a report, the Ming Pao quoted an anonymous editorial writer at the China 
Times as saying that the newspaper was under no pressure from the Ma 
administration not to publish Nan Fang Shuo’s column.
 
 The anonymous editorial writer said the editorial room has asked Nan Fang Shuo 
to present evidence to back up his accusations about the plan to eliminate Wang, 
but he could not and thus it decided not to run the column, which contained 
baseless charges, the Ming Pao reported.
 
 Nan Fang Shuo told the Taipei Times that no one from the China Times had talked 
to him about his column.
 
 The China Times asked a friend of Nan Fang Shuo, who used to work in the 
editorial room in the newspaper, to pass a message to him that “they would not 
run the column” and did not give me an explanation, he said.
 
 It was the second time the China Times rejected Nan Fang Shuo’s column.
 
 The first rejection came on May 17, 2011, with a column where Nan Fang Shuo 
mentioned that Ma and Beijing had agreed to a strategy to boost Ma’s chance of 
winning the 2008 presidential election.
 
 A columnist for the China Times for more than 20 years, Nan Fang Shuo said he 
did not join the boycott staged by academics against writing op-ed for the 
newspaper amid the Anti-Media Monopolization movement last year because he found 
it hard to abandon the newspaper at the time.
 
 “But now, I have no feelings for [the China Times] and I will never write a 
column for the newspaper,” Nan Fang Shuo said.
 
 The Chinese-language Apple Daily yesterday invited him to start a column in the 
newspaper and he has accepted the offer, he said.
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