The Manila Times

Protesters throw paint on Chiang Kai-shek coffin

- AFP

TAIPEI: Taiwanese protesters on Wednesday splashed red paint on the tomb of former Nationalis­t ruler Chiang Kai-shek, urging the government to speed up a plan to erase symbols of the island’s authoritar­ian past.

The protest came on the 71st anniversar­y of a Nationalis­t massacre estimated to have killed as many as 28,000, the prelude to a “White Terror” political purge that saw thousands executed.

Although Taiwan today is a full December that a bill was passed to tackle the legacy of injustices under Chiang.

It included a call for streets and schools with names commemorat- ing the former ruler to be changed and his statues taken down.

Memorials to Chiang have been defaced over the years by those who vilify him as a dictator. Hundreds of his statues have already been moved to a lakeside park close to his mausoleum in Taoyuan City, now a tourist attraction.

About ten protesters—including students and pro-independen­ce activists—threw cans of paint on Chiang’s the mausoleum was a provocatio­n.

“As long as Taiwan’s resources are spent serving the spirits of Chiang and his son, as long as worship of the dictators has not disappeare­d, transition­al justice can never truly be achieved,” the group said in a statement.

Video footage showed them holding a white banner reading: “Abolish China authoritar­ian rule. Establish the Republic of Taiwan.”

For many youths on the island, Chiang is also synonymous with the authoritar­ianism which wary Taiwanese now equate with mainland China.

Self-governing Taiwan has never formally declared independen­ce from China, which still views the island as part of its territory.

The two sides split after a civil war in 1949, with Chiang leading his Kuomintang (Nationalis­t) army to Taiwan after being defeated by the Communists.

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