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Home The News News Activist calls on US voters to appeal for Chen’s release

Activist calls on US voters to appeal for Chen’s release

A Washington human rights organization is urging Americans to protest the continued imprisonment of former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁), whose medical condition is deteriorating.

In a column carried this week by the Huffington Post Web site, Human Rights Action Center founder Jack Healey called on voters to contact their US representatives and senators to press for the release of Chen, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for corruption, on health grounds.

“Remind them of the previously impressive track record of Taiwan moving to respect human rights and to become a modern multiparty democracy and tell them that you’re concerned about their treatment of Chen Shui-bian and the signal it sends to all opposition politicians in Taiwan and elsewhere in the region who think of challenging single party rule,” Healey wrote.

“It would be far better to send Chen home before his seventh anniversary of being in prison rather than have him end up expiring in one,” he wrote.

Healey said that Chen should be released on medical parole, a compassionate pardon or a graduated release program, and that it should happen as quickly as is feasible “for the sake of the future of a Taiwan where democracy and human rights both flourish in full bloom rather than flicker in darkness.”

Healey said there is strong evidence of “political direction” in the way that prosecutors prioritized and pursued fraud charges against Chen.

He also claims there were “enough deviations from accepted standards of fair judicial proceedings” to call into question the independence of the judiciary in Chen’s case.

“It currently appears that the continued incarceration of Chen is an attempt to punish the audacity of the opposition to actually challenge the KMT [Chinese Nationalist Party] as the source of power on the island and a cautionary warning to all others about the hazards of demanding a voice in the question of how to govern,” Healey said.

He said that the speed with which the Sunflower movement rose and took root in the public imagination suggests another “seismic shift” in the nation’s hearts and minds.

Healey made an appeal to President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) to free Chen before he dies in prison and to work to heal political polarization.

“Taiwan used to be one of the most inspiring places in Asia for human rights, and we hope that it can be so in the future,” Healey said.


Source: Taipei Times - 2014/06/19



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Newsflash

The odds of President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) being re-elected in 2012 yesterday fell below 50 percent for the first time since May, according to a university prediction market.

Prediction markets are speculative exchanges, with the value of an asset meant to reflect the likelihood of a future event.

On a scale from NT$0 to NT$100, the probability of Ma winning a re-election bid was, according to bidders, NT$48.40, the Center for Prediction Market at National Chengchi University said.

The center has market predictions on topics including politics, the economy, international affairs, sports and entertainment. Members can tender virtual bids on the events, with the bidding price meant to reflect probability.

The re-election market had attracted 860,000 trading entries as of yesterday. It was launched in April.

The center said the figure slipped 2.3 percentage points yesterday from a day earlier, when Ma conceded that his party did not fare as well as hoped in the “three-in-one” elections.

The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) won 12 of Saturday’s 17 mayor and commissioner elections, but its total percentage of votes fell 2 percentage points from 2005 to 47.88 percent of votes nationwide.

The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) won just four of the races, but received 45.32 percent of the ballots, or a 7.2 percentage-point increase from 2005.

Since the center opened the trading on Ma’s re-election chances on April 11, prices have largely hovered around NT$60, but jumped to NT$70 in mid-June. The figure then fell to NT$51.80 in August after Typhoon Morakot lashed Taiwan, killing hundreds.

After then-premier Liu Chao-shiuan (劉兆玄) resigned in September, the price returned to NT$63.2 and remained at around NT$60 for the following two months, the center said.

Since Ma took over as KMT chairman, the center said the number had steadily declined from NT$58 on Nov. 18 to NT$50.80 on Dec. 5. After Saturday’s elections, the figure fell below NT$50.

The center said the outcome yesterday would likely affect next year’s elections for the five special municipalities, as well as the next presidential election.

It also said the probability of Taipei Mayor Hau Lung-bin (郝龍斌) winning re-election was 72 percent, while the chances of Taipei County Commissioner Chou Hsi-wei (周錫瑋) winning again were 20 percent.

Source: Taipei Times 2009/12/07