Tomorrow marks the 30th anniversary of the Kaohsiung Incident of 1979. It was a  watershed in Taiwan’s political history, as it galvanized the democratic  opposition in Taiwan and overseas Taiwanese into action, and thus ushered in the  beginning of the end of the Chinese Nationalist Party’s (KMT) martial law and  one-party police state.
In Taiwan itself, the event is being commemorated  with a series of activities, including seminars, a photo exhibition and a  concert in Kaohsiung. The irony of the situation is that one of the defendants  in the “sedition” trial that followed the Incident was Chen Chu (陳菊), now mayor  of Kaohsiung.
Over the years, much has been written about the  significance of the events of December 1979, the subsequent trials and the  Incident’s impact on Taiwan’s transition to democracy. Here we want to highlight  two aspects: one, what was said during the incident, and did it constitute  “sedition,” and two, how it played a role in galvanizing the overseas Taiwanese  community.
The event, which started out as a Human Rights Day celebration  by the nascent democratic opposition, turned into a melee after the police  surrounded the crowd and started using teargas. Three days later, the KMT  authorities used the disturbances as an excuse to arrest virtually all leaders  of the opposition. Eight major leaders were accused of “sedition,” tried in a  military court and sentenced to prison terms ranging from 12 years to life  imprisonment.
What is less well-known is that the course of events during  the evening of Dec. 10 were later chronicled in a publication called The  Kaohsiung Tapes, published in December 1981, which is now available at  www.taiwandc.org/kao-tapes.pdf. The document presents a word-for-word account of  what was said during the evening, and strongly contradicts the KMT government’s  claim that the speakers were “inciting” the crowd to “overthrow” the government  — the basis for the sedition charges.
The document shows that the police  were primarily responsible for the disturbances, when heavily armed military and  police units encircled the crowd and started to throw teargas into the peaceful  demonstration. The melee occurred after the crowd broke through the police  cordon to escape the teargas. 
On the second point: How did the Incident  play a role in galvanizing the overseas Taiwanese community? It is of course  well-known that the defendants and their defense lawyers became the core of the  Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which was founded in 1986. Their roster  reads like the Who is Who of the DPP.
What is less well-known is that the  Incident provided a strong impetus for overseas Taiwanese to get organized and  to speak out. Before “Kaohsiung” there were pro-democracy organizations and  groups, such as the World United Formosans for Independence, the various  Taiwanese associations (in the US, Europe, etc) and the Overseas Alliance for  Democratic Rule in Taiwan, which was organized by Kuo Yu-hsin (郭雨新). But their  impact was relatively limited.
After “Kaohsiung,” the existing active  clusters attained critical mass and gained considerable political power and  influence in their host countries. In the US, Canada and in European states the  overseas Taiwanese organized themselves and started to lobby the US Congress and  European parliaments and governments.
This increased political awareness  and activity led to the establishment of a number of like-minded organizations,  such as the North American Taiwanese Professors Association (1980), the North  American Taiwanese Women’s Association (1986) and the Formosan Association for  Public Affairs (FAPA) — set up in 1982 by Mark Chen (陳唐山), who later became  foreign minister; Chai Trong-rong (蔡同榮) and Peng Ming-min (彭明敏). 
FAPA  was specifically set up to work with the US Congress, and it has gained strong  support for human rights and democracy in Taiwan. Through its activities, the  “Gang of Four” (senators Ted Kennedy, Claiborne Pell and representatives Stephen  Solarz and Jim Leach) frequently and forcefully spoke out for an end to the  KMT’s one-party dictatorship and the 40-year-old martial law.
After  Taiwan made its successful transition to democracy in the late 1980s, FAPA and  the other organizations reoriented their work to support Taiwan’s membership in  international organizations, such as the UN and the WHO.
Sadly, the  erosion of justice under the President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) administration, and  the drift toward China at the expense of democracy and hard-earned freedoms are  now necessitating a renewed focus on human rights and democracy in Taiwan.  
The anniversary of the Kaohsiung Incident presents a good opportunity  for the people in Taiwan and abroad to reflect on what has been achieved — and  what can so easily be whittled away.
Gerrit van der Wees is  editor of Taiwan Communique, published in Washington by the Formosan Association  for Public Affairs.
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2009/12/09
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