Bangkok Post

Massacre victims’ kin demand justice

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TAIPEI: For Pan Hsin-hsing the sight and smell of lilies held a particular horror for many years — the pungent flowers decorated the room where his executed father lay before the funeral.

He was just six years old when Pan Mu-chih, a doctor and local politician, was arrested, tortured and killed in a 1947 massacre that was the precursor to years of political purges in Taiwan, known as the “White Terror”.

A last note from his father was scribbled on a cigarette pack given to him by a sympatheti­c jailer and smuggled out to the family. “Don’t be sad, I die for the residents of our city. I die with no regret,” it read.

Tomorrow, Mr Pan will speak at a national commemorat­ion for the victims of the crackdown by troops under nationalis­t leader Chiang Kai-shek, whose Kuomintang party governed Taiwan at the time.

On behalf of many who lost loved ones, he will call for long-delayed justice.

Mr Pan’s father was a critic of the KMT and was killed by a firing squad alongside other local politician­s in southern Chiayi city, where there were anti-government riots.

Those riots were part of island-wide civilian unrest which started on Feb 28, 1947, after an inspector beat a woman selling untaxed cigarettes in Taipei.

The immediate crackdown on protesters is estimated to have killed up to 28,000 people.

Mr Pan also lost his 15-year-old brother, who was shot after going out to look for their missing father. The family pretended the young boy had committed suicide for fear of repercussi­ons if they told the truth.

Another of his eight siblings held their dying father in his arms after finding the train station where the execution took place, says Mr Pan, his voice cracking.

The body was brought to their family’s clinic, where he had worked as a doctor, and laid out in the waiting room so people could pay their respects.

Mr Pan says another of his brothers and a sister were jailed for months as “communist spies”, several of his siblings have struggled with depression.

For years, he associated lilies with that terrifying time.

“I remember looking at the lilies and smelling their scent as men who came to pay their condolence­s got angry that my father was killed, while women wept,” he said. “It was difficult to bear.”

The massacres of 1947 were a prelude to wider purges of government opponents

between 1949 and 1987 under martial law imposed by Chiang and his son, whose KMT fled to Taiwan after it was defeated by Mao Zedong’s Communist Party in a civil war in mainland China.

Official records state around 140,000 people were tried by military courts during the White Terror, with between 3,000 and 8,000 executed. Many believe the actual numbers are higher.

Taiwan’s current government under President Tsai Ing-wen’s Democratic Progressiv­e Party has promised to investigat­e the purges. But with the first report not due for three years, some activists are critical of what they consider lack of progress.

Yeh Hung-ling heads a campaign group seeking justice for victims’ families and has been helping them track down last letters from loved ones. Her group is calling for a new “political archives law” to allow them greater access to restricted files.

Other activists want to see Chiang’s image wiped out — figures of him across Taiwan are defaced each year on the Feb 28 anniversar­y.

Mr Pan says Chiang is to blame for his father’s death. He believes the memorial hall in the former leader’s name in Taipei should be renamed, and the statue of Chiang removed. Some activists have threatened to topple the statue tomorrow to commemorat­e the massacre.

A government-funded report in 2006 found Chiang should take responsibi­lity for the 1947 crackdown. But campaigner­s say there has been no official recognitio­n of Chiang as the culprit, or his role in the wider purges.

“We demand the truth be clarified and those who were responsibl­e be made accountabl­e, with their names listed in official records and textbooks,” says Yang Chen-long, head of the Memorial Foundation of 228.

When Mr Pan speaks alongside President Tsai tomorrow, he will renew his call for Chiang’s image to be rubbed from Taiwan’s landscape as a mark of respect for the dead.

Mr Pan was one of the first ever Taiwanese citizens to reveal his family’s experience­s during the purges — all discussion of the crackdown was taboo until martial law was lifted in 1987 and Taiwan began its journey to democracy. “Speaking out helped heal the emotional wound,” he said.

Mr Pan said the purges should be remembered to prevent another tragedy in Taiwan. “We don’t want revenge,” he said.

 ??  ?? Pan Hsin-hsing, the son of a ‘228 Victim’ which is used to refer to those executed in the Feb 28, 1947, incident, displays pictures of his family in Taipei on Feb 8.
Pan Hsin-hsing, the son of a ‘228 Victim’ which is used to refer to those executed in the Feb 28, 1947, incident, displays pictures of his family in Taipei on Feb 8.

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