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Home The News News Chen not seeking amnesty

Chen not seeking amnesty

Former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) yesterday said he welcomed the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) government to rule him out of any commutation it might grant next year to mark the Republic of China’s (ROC) 100th anniversary, his son, Chen Chih-chung (陳致中) said.

The former president began serving a 17-and-a-half-year sentence at Taipei Prison on Dec. 2 after being convicted of accepting bribes in connection with a land deal and a personnel appointment.

After visiting his father, Chen Chih-chung, who was elected as a Greater Kaohsiung City councilor late last month, made a public pledge outside of the prison — alongside several other city councilors-elect who are members of a new political group called “One Side, One Country” (一邊一國連線) to uphold the alliance’s goals.

More than 30 members of the alliance won council seats in last month’s special municipality elections, with nearly one-third becoming councilors in Greater Tainan (resulting from the merger of Tainan City and Tainan County). The group is dedicated to promoting Taiwan’s independence.

Chen Chih-chung said his father found it comforting that the alliance members chose to make a pledge outside the prison and he hoped the group would get bigger.



Source: Taipei Times - 2010/12/25



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Newsflash


A page from a textbook based on previous high-school curriculum guidelines says that people’s identification with being Taiwanese has been on the increase since 1996. Photo: provided by Huang I-chung

Action Coalition of Civics Teachers spokesman Huang I-chung (黃益中) said the Ministry of Education’s changes to high-school curriculum guidelines allowed it to sneak in the desiccated corpse of party-state education of bygone days.

The dogma of the past might be making a comeback in some parts of new high-school civic education textbooks after its removal nine years ago, Huang said.