Taiwan Tati Cultural and Educational Foundation

 
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Taiwan Tati Cultural and Educational Foundation

‘Wild Strawberries’ are the future

On the eve of Nov. 26, when a consortium was to sign a contract to buy Next Media Group’s Taiwanese businesses, dozens of students gathered in front of the Executive Yuan despite the cold and heavy rain, urging the government to stop Chinese influence over Taiwanese media, to oppose media monopolies and to safeguard press freedom. The students waited for a day and a night, but the authorities refused to engage them in a dialogue.

Their failure was not very surprising. Still, seeing their mobilization, organization, publicity materials, division of labor and discourse, I was pleased to see the genesis of a new, mature, social movement. I would like to call this generation the “Wild Strawberry generation.”

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US hints at joint engagement with EU over Tibet

DHARAMSHALA, December 13: In what could be seen as a further push for establishing an international mechanism on the crisis in Tibet, US cited Tibet as an area where the EU and US can partner on “common strategic engagement.”

The remarks were made by US Under Secretary Maria Otero in her statement at the European Union's Human Rights Day Event in Washington DC on Tuesday.

Delivering the statement on behalf of Otero, Deputy Assistant Secretary Daniel Baer said the Obama Administration wants Europe to engage more in Asia along with the US, “to see the region not only as a market, but as a focus of common strategic engagement.”

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Ma not fit to lecture on human rights

“A head of state being heckled is not a big deal in a democratic society; there is no need to regard it as losing face.”

These were the words of then-Taipei mayor Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) in October 2006, spoken at the time of a campaign by red-clad protesters to oust then-president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) of the Democratic Progressive Party.

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Human rights protesters heckle Ma Ying-jeou over treatment of Chen Shui-bian

Angry supporters of imprisoned Chen Shui-bian had a few words for Republic of China in-exile President Ma Ying-jeou at a Human Rights Day ceremony in Taipei on Dec.10. Chen, who was Ma’s predecessor in office, was jailed in 2008 for alleged corruption and has been kept in harsh prison conditions.

The protest erupted at the National Human Rights Museum where Ma was recognizing victims of the White Terror period during Taiwan’s long martial law era. About two dozen protestors shouted Ma off the stage declaring he was not fit to present human rights awards. One man was tackled by police as he threw his shoe, hat, and tote bag at Ma.

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Newsflash

The central bank is pushing for curbs to be imposed on the amount of Chinese capital that can be placed in local stocks, hoping to stem the inflow of speculative funds, an official said yesterday.

The Financial Supervisory Commission, which has the authority to set limits on Chinese funds, has been approached by central bank officials eager to keep controls tight, said Lu Ting-chieh (盧廷劼), the commission’s chief secretary.