The Borneo Post

Taiwan ex-leader Ma convicted in political leaks case

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TAIPEI: A Taiwanese court yesterday found former president Ma Ying-jeou guilty in a political leaks case, his first conviction in a raft of lawsuits brought against him since he stepped down two years ago.

Ma was sentenced to four months in prison for violating the communicat­ion security and surveillan­ce act, said the high court, overturnin­g a previous not guilty verdict from a lower court.

The former president said he will appeal the sentence and remains free.

Ma was also convicted of breaching the personal data protection act and of “using his presidenti­al power not for executing presidenti­al legal duties”, the court added.

Under Taiwanese law any sentence under six months can be paid off with a fine.

The high court found that Ma had attempted to damage the “character and rights” of opposition lawmaker Ker Chienming when he leaked confidenti­al informatio­n about an ongoing probe associated with Ker.

Investigat­ors had been accused of tapping Ker’s phone to acquire the informatio­n.

The informatio­n that he obtained through his office “should have been kept secret”, a statement from the court said.

The leaks controvers­y sparked a political storm in 2013 and saw two top officials resign, while thousands of protesters took to the streets to demand Ma step down.

The DPP, then in opposition, compared the probe to the Watergate scandal in the United States.

The probe revolved around informatio­n gained from surveillan­ce on Ker which implicated the then parliament­ary speaker, a rival of Ma, in influence peddling.

Ma was not present when the verdict was announced. He had maintained his innocence throughout the trial and accused the prosecutio­n of basing their case on flimsy evidence and speculatio­n.

Ma’s office said he “deeply regrets” the verdict and that it had failed to take into considerat­ion “that a president needs to fulfil his commitment to the constituti­on and his duties to the country”.

Last year, the ex-president was cleared of defamation charges and leaking confidenti­al informatio­n by the Taipei district court in two separate cases also relating to the 2013 judicial probe into the parliament­ary speaker.

While still in office Ma was protected by political immunity.

But since he stepped down as leader in May 2016 the 67year- old has been hit with a string of corruption and other allegation­s.

Ma’s Beijing- friendly Kuomintang ( KMT) party held power from 2008 to 2016, before it was trounced by Tsai Ing-wen and her Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP).

Ma was the third ex-president in Taiwan to be indicted on criminal charges.

His predecesso­r Chen Shui-bian was serving a 20-year sentence for corruption when he was freed on medical parole in 2015. — AFP

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