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Home The News News Former president Chen Shui-bian seeks release

Former president Chen Shui-bian seeks release

Former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) yesterday asked to be released from jail while appealing a 20-year graft sentence, saying that he had sent back most of the money that had been wired abroad.

After the Special Investigation Panel confirmed it had received almost all of the NT$662 million (US$22 million) Chen’s family had wired into Swiss bank accounts, Chen’s attorney said he was filing an application to secure the former president’s release.

The former president said that the money was political campaign money and that it was wired abroad by his wife without his knowledge.

Cheng Wen-long (鄭文龍) said that the Taiwan High Court stated last month that Chen had to wire all the money back if he wanted to increase his chances of being released. Cheng said that since the money had now been returned to Taiwan, the Taiwan High Court had no reason to continue keeping Chen in custody.

In the many rulings extending Chen’s detention, the High Court generally claimed that the former president represented a flight risk.

He said the application with the Supreme Court requested Chen’s immediate release.

With the last portion of the money returned to Taiwan yesterday, Chen had done everything in his power, said Chen Sung-shan (陳淞山), the former president’s secretary.

The Taiwan High Court on June 11 reduced the life sentences for Chen and his wife, Wu Shu-jen (吳淑珍), to 20 years in prison. Chen and his wife were convicted of embezzling public funds, forgery and money laundering during Chen’s two terms as president. He has been in detention for more than 600 days.

ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY AFP AND STAFF WRITER


Source: Taipei Times - 2010/11/02



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Newsflash

Following repeated pledges by President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) that there would be no political ramifications to the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) with China, US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks show that Beijing intends to use deepening economic relations with Taiwan as a means to start political negotiations.

In a cable dated Jan. 6 last year from the US embassy in Beijing, Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) Vice Secretary-General Ma Xiaoguang (馬曉光), who had just concluded the fourth round of ECFA talks with the Straits Exchange Foundation in Taichung, said during a meeting with the US acting deputy chief of mission, Robert Goldberg, on Dec. 29, 2009, that deepening economic relations would “inevitably lead to more complicated political issues.”