Former president Chen Shui-bian’s (陳水扁) mother yesterday said at a protest  against his detention that she was saddened by the fact that for the past two  years her son has been unable to call her on Mother’s Day.
Chen Lee Shen  (陳李慎) came to Taipei from Tainan to join a sit-in rally on Jinan Road calling  for Chen’s release that was organized by various pro-localization groups,  including some Democratic Progressive Party officials from southern  Taiwan.
“I have not seen my son for so long. I have not heard his voice  for so long,” she said, crying. “I feel deep sadness and pain every day. I am  more than 80 years old, but I have to live with that pain every  day.”
Today marks the former president’s 551st day in custody over money  laundering and graft charges.
“My son has been wronged. He is innocent,”  his mother told the crowd.
Chen Lee Shen was accompanied by her two  daughters and Chen Shui-bian’s son, Chen Chih-chung (陳致中).
An estimated  5,000 people joined the rally. Hundreds of Chen and Taiwanese independence  supporters were bused in from all over the country to join the  protest.
The Taiwan High Court last month prolonged Chen’s detention  until June 23.
“The justice system is dead, but A-Bian [Chen Shui-bian]  is not lonely. A-Bian’s mother is not lonely. We are always with them and will  always support them,” Central Taiwan Society president Chen Wan-te (陳萬得) told  the crowd.
A few blocks away on Ketagalan Boulevard, a second protest  took place. Unlike the rambunctious crowd on Jinan Road, however, this protest  offered something far more sober: silence. Under the watchful eye of a dozen  police officers, more than 1,000 plastic stools were arranged, each anchoring a  balloon. When viewed from above, they formed the character “Ma,” or horse —  President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) surname — with a large yellow arrow pointing at  the Presidential Office a few hundred meters away. At one point, a Buddhist monk  walked among the chairs and stood there for a few moments in  contemplation.
“Justice is dead,” read signs posted around the venue. A  picture of a plaque from Green Island, which served as a prison for political  prisoners during the White Terror era, also graced the area.
The former  president was first detained on Nov. 12, 2008, and released on Dec. 13, 2008,  following his indictment. He was detained again on Dec. 30, 2008, after the  Taipei District Court approved a request by prosecutors to take him back into  custody. He has remained in detention ever since. 
Source: Taipei Times - 2010/05/09
Slideshow of the activity: Bian Mather's Calling



 









