| Ma must ¡¥face the 
people¡¦s misery,¡¦ demonstrators say
 DON¡¦T RUN AWAY: The protesters said they would 
rally at the KMT congress wherever it is held, and called on the KMT¡¦s next 
generation to face its rift
 
 By Mo Yan-chih / Staff Reporter
 
 
 A group of National Taiwan 
University students stage a protest at the university against President Ma Ying-jeou 
and other key officials yesterday. Photo: CNA
 
 In the wake of the Chinese Nationalist 
Party¡¦s (KMT) decision to postpone its party congress that was scheduled for 
Sunday due to protests planned against President Ma Ying-jeou (°¨^¤E), a group of 
protesters from labor unions and civic groups yesterday protested outside the 
KMT headquarters, accusing Ma of evading public discontent and urging the party 
to address political strife.
 Shouting: ¡§Face the misery of the people, Ma Ying-jeou. Four KMT star 
politicians, stop blurring the line between right and wrong,¡¨ the protesters 
accused Ma and Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng (¤ýª÷¥) of worsening living 
conditions for the public amid their political rift, and urged Ma¡¦s possible 
successors ¡X Vice President Wu Den-yih (§d´°¸q), Premier Jiang Yi-huah (¦¿©y¾ì), New 
Taipei City (·s¥_¥«) Mayor Eric Chu (¦¶¥ßÛ) and Taipei Mayor Hau Lung-bin (°qÀsÙy) ¡X to 
resolve the issue for the sake of their own political futures.
 
 ¡§The KMT and these political stars should stop the so-called ¡¥Respecting Wang 
and supporting Ma¡¦ approach and start addressing the issue. If they do not 
separate themselves from Ma and the political rift until next year¡¦s local 
election, it will be too late,¡¨ National Alliance for Workers of Closed 
Factories representative Wu Yong-yi (§d¥Ã¼Ý) said.
 
 The alliance will continue to organize anti-Ma rallies, with at least 45 civic 
groups participating, despite the KMT¡¦s decision to delay the party congress to 
next month or November, he said.
 
 ¡§We don¡¦t care when or where the KMT¡¦s congress will be held. The protests will 
go on, and we will follow Ma and the KMT wherever they go,¡¨ he said.
 
 Yesterday¡¦s protest was held in response to the KMT¡¦s announcement on Tuesday 
that it has decided to delay its 19th party congress, which was to begin on 
Sunday at the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall, due to civic groups¡¦ plans to hold a 
rally against Ma there that day.
 
 The party is considering holding the congress at Chungshan Hall on Yangmingshan 
on Oct. 26, but no plans have been confirmed for the new date and venue.
 
 Ma was unaffected by the protest yesterday as he presided over the KMT¡¦s Central 
Standing Committee in the building. Dozens of police officers were dispatched to 
the KMT headquarters to prevent the protesters, of which there were about 20, 
from entering the building.
 
 Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Taipei City Councilor Chien Yu-yen (²§E®Ë) 
accused Taipei¡¦s police department of ¡§wasting its manpower¡¨ protecting Ma, 
urging the department not to become bodyguards for the president.
 
 She said the KMT has tightened security at the party headquarters since July as 
more groups took their protests to the venue at the weekly Central Standing 
committee, and the department sent more than 140 police to the scene at a 
protest in July.
 
 Hau shrugged off Chien¡¦s accusations, saying police were dispatched in 
accordance with the size of rallies and protests, as well as protocols regarding 
the protection of the president and government officials.
 
 Students held a separate protest on the grounds of National Taiwan University 
yesterday.
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