The Borneo Post

Taiwan moves to erase authoritar­ian legacy with new laws

-

TAIPEI: Tributes to Taiwan’s former dictator Chiang Kai-shek will be removed across the island after lawmakers voted in favour of the mandatory axing of symbols of its authoritar­ian past.

The so- called ‘ transition­al justice’ bill, which was passed late Tuesday, means that streets and schools will be renamed and statues taken down.

It also paves the way for a full investigat­ion into Chiang’s ‘White Terror’ — a purge of his political opponents between 1947 and his death in 1975.

Campaigner­s have long called for the names of unjustly jailed or executed victims to be cleared and perpetrato­rs exposed.

The bill said that authoritar­ian rule should be ‘stripped of legitimacy’ as it violated freedom and democracy.

“For this purpose, institutio­ns, schools, public buildings and spaces should be prohibited from displaying any commemorat­ive symbols of authoritar­ian rule,” it said.

“Related symbols and signs should also be removed, renamed, or otherwise disposed of.”

President Tsai Ing-wen is expected to ratify the bill within the next two weeks.

Public statues of Chiang are regularly attacked and hundreds now lie discarded in the grounds of his mausoleum outside Taipei.

Since Tsai’s opposition Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP) took the leadership and a majority in parliament from the Kuomintang ( KMT) in elections in 2016, it has targeted Chiang’s legacy.

Earlier this year, it announced a hall in memory of the dictator — one of Taipei’s most recongisab­le landmarks — would stop selling souvenirs depicting him, while references to him would be removed from its galleries.

That move came on the 70th anniversar­y of a 1947 massacre which is estimated to have killed 28,000 people and was the prelude to the “White Terror” crackdown.

Chiang’s public profile was also steadily eroded when the DPP first ruled the island from 20002008, including the renaming of the island’s main airport and his image being scrapped from bank notes.

The new bill is the first time removal of authoritar­ian symbols has been made compulsory.

Chiang fled to Taiwan and ruled the island under martial law after his nationalis­t Kuomintang ( KMT) troops lost a civil war in 1949 to the Communists on the mainland.

Although still revered by some as a hero for taking on Communist forces and fighting the Japanese during the Second World War, others see him as a stain on the history of the now fully fledged democracy.

As part of the bill, parties must declare all political files they have dating between 1945 and 1992 and could be ordered to hand them over to national archives, as part of a probe into Chiang’s rule.

The DPP described the bill as a “bridge of reconcilia­tion” that would be a “comfort and compensati­on” to victims and their families.

But the KMT blasted the bill as unconstitu­tional, saying it gave the DPP an excuse to meddle in the judicial system.

Parliament last year also passed a bill to investigat­e and seize illgotten assets from all parties, although it is only the KMT which has faced questions about its trove, leading to accusation­s of a witchhunt. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows a tourist walking among statues of Chiang at a park in Taoyuan, northern Taiwan. — AFP photo
File photo shows a tourist walking among statues of Chiang at a park in Taoyuan, northern Taiwan. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia