More groups join
Double Ten anti-government rallies
By Lee Hsin-fang, Lee I-chia and Stacy Hsu / Staff reporters,
with staff writer
Students from the National Taiwan
College of Performing Arts dressed as ancient warriors rehearse in front of the
Presidential Office Building in Taipei yesterday in preparation for tomorrow’s
Double Ten National Day parade.
Photo: CNA
Taiwan Nation Alliance convener
Yao Chia-wen, center, tells a press conference in Taipei yesterday that his
group plans to join other civic groups to stage a protest rally against
President Ma Ying-jeou on Double Ten National Day tomorrow.
Photo: Lo Pei-der, Taipei Times
Taiwan Nation Alliance convener Yao
Chia-wen (姚嘉文) yesterday said that members of the alliance’s pro-localization
groups will take part in a major rally against President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) to
be staged by activist group Citizen 1985 on Double Ten National Day tomorrow.
“The alliance has three demands: that Ma step down to take responsibility for
causing political turmoil; that the Special Investigation Division [SID] of the
Supreme Prosecutors’ Office be abolished for colluding with the president in
conducting illegal wiretapping; and that the cross-strait service trade pact be
blocked,” Yao said.
The first two demands referred to a wiretapping scandal involving Ma, the SID
and Prosecutor-General Huang Shih-ming (黃世銘) that has snowballed into a
political storm.
Ma’s critics have accused him of breaching constitutional information
confidentiality regulations by discussing with Huang in person and via telephone
details of the SID’s wiretap-based investigation into alleged improper lobbying
on behalf of Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng (王金平) before the case was
concluded on Sept. 5.
The rally is to begin with a flag-raising ceremony at 10:10am in front of the
Legislative Yuan, during which a specially designed flag will be hoisted in
place of the national flag to signify the awakening of citizens’ power.
The Citizen 1985 is to call on the government to reinforce direct democracy by
lowering the referendum threshold; rationalize the recall mechanism by lowering
the threshold to recall elected officials; let people’s voices be heard by
lowering the threshold for a party to receive public subsidies and be awarded a
legislator-at-large seat; and say no to back-room deals by renegotiating the
cross-strait agreement with China.
Taiwan Society president Chang Yen-hsien (張炎憲) said the service trade deal and
the cross-strait negotiations on setting up representative offices were parts of
Ma’s ploy to use the “one China” framework to wrap up Taiwan as a gift to China.
“We must work together to block the agreement to protect the people of Taiwan,”
Chang said.
Taiwan Friends Association president Huang Kun-hu (黃崑虎) said lawmakers should
abolish agencies like the SID that were established by an autocratic government
for the purpose of cementing its power.
Huang also warned of the potential negative impact that cross-strait treaty
could have on the nation’s underprivileged minorities.
Separately yesterday, representatives from several environmentalists groups in
Taipei said they are planning to stage an anti-nuclear rally in front of the
legislature tomorrow morning to demand the government halt the construction of
the Fourth Nuclear Power Plant in New Taipei City’s (新北市) Gongliao District
(貢寮).
“Only when we become a nuclear-free nation will we dare to celebrate National
Day, because with nuclear power plants in operation, we are afraid of national
disasters,” Green Party Taiwan member Pan Han-shen (潘翰聲) said.
The radioactive waste produced by the nation’s operating nuclear power plants is
a serious problem for Taiwan, said Kuo Ching-lin (郭慶霖), chief executive of the
Northern Coast Anti-Nuclear Action Alliance.
Kuo said that since the nation is unable to find a permanent depository site for
the waste, many Taiwanese are worried that they will have to always live under
the threat of radiation leakage accidents.
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