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Home The News News Accidental missile firing ‘unforgivable,’ Tsai says

Accidental missile firing ‘unforgivable,’ Tsai says

President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) yesterday called the accidental firing of an anti-ship missile on Friday “unforgivable.”

“The missile mishap on board the Chinchiang-class corvette was absolutely unforgivable,” Tsai said on Facebook. “The armed forces and I are one: When they do well, I would share their glory, and when they make a mistake, I would definitely face it with them.”

Tsai said “bold reforms” are needed to earn back the public’s trust in the military.

Meanwhile, a survey conducted by the Taiwan Thinktank on Thursday and Friday among people aged 20 and older, and published yesterday, gauged people’s opinions on recent incidents, including those implicating military officers.

Of those polled, 74.6 percent regarded the missile incident as an indicator that the armed forces have “a screw loose,” while about 17 percent of the respondents disagreed with the statement and about 9 percent declined to state their opinion.

A cross-analysis of the results suggested that both pan-green and pan-blue supporters believed that the incident was proof of lax management in the military, with 77.6 percent of the respondents who said they support the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and 75.9 percent of those who support the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) sharing the opinion.

DPP Legislator Tsai Yi-yu (蔡易餘), speaking at a news conference in Taipei to release the survey results, was asked whether the Tsai administration’s refusal to apologize to China over the incident could have significant effects on cross-strait ties.

“The incident is apparently a matter of internal affairs, given that the missile landed in our territorial waters and hit Taiwanese fishermen,” Tsai Yi-yu said. “Apologizing to Beijing for it would only make the nation a laughing stock.”

The locally developed Hsiung Feng III missile was launched from one of the navy’s 500-tonne Chinchiang-class corvettes at Zuoying Military Harbor in Kaohsiung during a drill at 8:15am on Friday.

It struck a Taiwanese fishing boat, the Hsiang Li Sheng (翔利昇), operating in waters southeast of Penghu County in the Taiwan Strait, killing its captain, Huang Wen-chung (黃文忠), and injuring three crew members.

The telephone survey also asked people their opinions on last week’s killing of a dog by soldiers at a military base, which resulted in disciplinary measures and legal action against the three officers who killed the dog and the punishment of six of their superiors.

Of those polled, 52.3 percent lauded the military’s handling of the matter, while 33.1 percent disapproved. About 15 percent did not express an opinion, the poll showed.

The poll collected 1,246 valid samples. It has a confidence level of 95 percent and a margin of error of 2.8 percentage points.


Source: Taipei Times - 2016/07/04



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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.