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Home The News News Chen acquitted on graft charge

Chen acquitted on graft charge

The Taipei District Court yesterday acquitted former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) in an embezzlement case involving US$330,000 in secret diplomatic funds.

The court ruling said that evidence provided by prosecutors failed to prove that Chen had embezzled diplomatic funds, court spokesman Huang Chun-ming (黃俊明) said.

The secret diplomatic funds Chen received from the government were used to buy gifts and cover other expenses for foreign persons, which is a regular practice of former and incumbent presidents, Huang said.

The court said prosecutors “suspected” Chen had kept the balance of those diplomatic funds and transferred them to the US accounts of his son, Chen Chih-chung (陳致中), but failed to offer solid evidence.

The Supreme Prosecutors' Office's Special Investigation Panel (SIP) in September last yearbrought the case to the district court.

Prosecutors alleged that public funds earmarked for diplomatic relations were embezzled by Chen, former National Security Council secretary-general Chiou I-jen (邱義仁) and former deputy minister of foreign affairs Michael Kau (高英茂), as well as two others whose bank accounts were used in the process.

The SIP alleges that during 11 foreign visits from August 2000 through September 2006, Chen embezzled US$30,000 each time from the US$100,000 government funds earmarked for improving foreign relations, resulting in embezzlement totaling US$330,000.

Dozens of Chen supporters outside the district court cheered the ruling. They chanted “A-bian go,” and “A-bian not guilty” after the results were announced.


Source: Taipei Times - 2010/06/09



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Newsflash


Part of the Democratic Progressive Party’s march to manifest the public’s dissatisfaction with President Ma Ying-jeou sets out from Wanhua train station in Taipei yesterday.
Photo: Lo Pei-der, Taipei Times

People from all walks of life took to the streets in Taipei yesterday to voice their dissatisfaction with President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) governance.

A group of Hakka people held big black flags with calligraphy in white that read yimin (義民, “righteous people”) as they marched. The flag is modeled on the black flags used by Hakka militias who defended their home villages during an uprising against the Qing Dynasty in 1786 and again when they fought against the Japanese occupation of Taiwan in 1895.