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Home The News News Aborigines demonstrate for secret ballot rights

Aborigines demonstrate for secret ballot rights

Saying that their right to secret voting is not properly protected, a group of Aboriginal voters yesterday staged a demonstration outside the Council of Indigenous Peoples (CIP), asking it to help negotiate for a better system.

“CIP please help out! Give us back the right to secret voting,” dozens of demonstrators mobilized by Kumu Hacio, an independent candidate for the mountain Aborigine seat on the Greater Tainan City Council shouted as they stood outside the council.

CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT

“The secret ballot is a right granted to everyone by the Constitution, but many Aboriginal voters do not enjoy the right because there are many polling stations with less than three Aboriginal voters casting their ballots in an election,” Kumu said.

Citing herself as an example, Kumu said that when she voted in the 2008 legislative election, there were only two registered Aboriginal voters at her polling station in Syuejia Township (學甲), Tainan County.

“As soon as I arrived at the polling station, staffers greeted me by saying that they had been waiting for me for a long time,” Kumu said. “In that case, it’s actually not hard to guess for whom I voted.”

Under the Election and Recall Act for Public Servants (公職人員選舉罷免法), Aboriginal voters vote separately for lawmakers or councilors representing Aboriginal constituents.

Kumu went on to say that as many as 80 percent of polling stations in Tainan and Tainan County have less than three Aborigines, so many Aboriginal voters do not vote to avoid being identified.

Kumu petitioned the Central Election Commission (CEC) last month, and the commission agreed to shrink the number of polling stations for Aborigines from 600 to 450 in Greater Tainan. However, the change still leaves 66 percent of all polling stations in Greater Tainan with less than three Aboriginal voters.

“We’re petitioning to the CIP because this is not just an issue for Aboriginal voters in Tainan, but for all Aboriginal voters in metropolitan areas,” Kumu said. “So the council should negotiate with the CEC to see what they can do nationwide.”

PROMISES

CIP Chief Secretary Chen Cheng-chia (陳成家) received the demonstrators, and promised to talk to the CEC about it.

“We really can’t make any promises because we’re not in charge of holding elections, but as the highest administrative body representing Aborigines, we will talk to the CEC about the issue,” Chen said.


Source: Taipei Times - 2010/10/16



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Newsflash


Student protest leaders Chen Wei-ting, front left, and Lin Fei-fan, right, gesture yesterday during the ongoing protest in front of the Legislative Yuan in Taipei against the cross-strait service trade pact.
Photo: Sam Yen, AFP

Without any positive response from President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) to their demands, student activists occupying the legislative floor yesterday said that they would organize a demonstration on Sunday in front of the Presidential Office Building in Taipei to increase the pressure on the president.

They said they may continue their occupation of the Legislative Yuan’s chamber as well.

“We have been here for 10 days, yet the president has not responded to us. If he thinks that we will eventually give up and walk out of the legislative chamber on our own, I want to tell him that he is wrong,” student leader Lin Fei-fan (林飛帆) told an afternoon news conference outside the legislative chamber.