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Ma, KMT
to blame for unrest
Taipei
Times
November
9, 2008
President Ma Ying-jeou is responsible for the stormy
protests against Association for Relations Acrosss the
Taiwan Strait Chairman Chen Yunlin last week. Taiwanese are
not against trade with China. Taiwan is China’s biggest
investor and a large trade partner. What Taiwanese are
venting about is trade at the cost of sovereignty. After
decades of fighting for democracy, they have legitimate
concerns about whether they will be sold out by Ma, Taiwan’s
pro-unification leader.
In negotiating for Chen’s visit, Ma essentially reduced
Taiwan’s status to a “nongovernment organization,” agreed to
be called “Mr” instead of “president,” took down all of
Taiwan’s national flags within Chen’s sight and claimed a
district-to-district relationship between Taiwan and China.
The recent large protests and increasing discontent with
Ma’s administration are clear signs that Taiwanese are not
ready to trade in their hard-earned democracy for economic
gains, and that Ma and his small group of Chinese
Nationalist Party (KMT) elite do not represent mainstream
Taiwanese opinion.
These protests also reveal the unsettling fact that Taiwan
is not yet a true democracy. The election of former
president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁),
the first non-KMT president, in 2000 created an illusion
that Taiwan had achieved democracy. In reality, Taiwan’s
current political system is best described as a
pseudo-democracy. Since the end of World War II, Taiwanese
politics has always been dominated and dictated by the KMT.
Chen was elected only because of infighting between KMT
factions.
During the democratic movement in the last two decades, the
KMT has stonewalled the political reform process. To
maintain control, the KMT deliberately set up barriers to
prevent further political reforms. The ill effects of these
political impediments have begun to emerge. For example, in
the last election, 42 percent of the votes for the
opposition party only resulted in 24 percent representation
in the legislature. This was the outcome of biased election
rules enacted by the KMT-controlled legislature.
Referendums, the people’s fundamental right to democracy,
were essentially barricaded. This, coupled with the fact
that a majority of the mass media is run by KMT-controlled
business and billions of dollars embezzled in the
authoritarian era were used to market KMT candidates,
ensured a KMT win in any nationwide election.
That the Legislative Yuan has been continuously dominated by
the KMT for 60 years with no possible alternative in sight
proves that Taiwan is not a true democracy. While a Zogby
poll showed 85 percent of Taiwanese support UN membership,
the Legislative Yuan obstructed all proposals for improving
Taiwan’s national status throughout Chen Shui-bian’s term in
office.
Even though its approval rating has sunk to less than 20
percent, the KMT-dominated Legislative Yuan continues to
ignore the multiple protests of up to 500,000 people. And Ma
continues his dominance without fear of any political
repercussions, including verbally reducing Taiwan’s autonomy
to a district relationship with China without putting it to
a vote through a referendum or legislative oversight.
This insensitivity and ignorance of mainstream opinion will
continue to cause civil unrest. Since the KMT has full
control of both the executive and the legislature, it has
full responsibility for providing a safe, congenial and true
democracy.
This can only be done by establishing a genuine democratic
political system and by returning political power to the
citizens of Taiwan. All political parties should be fairly
represented according to the popular vote, and Taiwanese
should have the unobstructed right to hold national
referendums. Only then can elected officials and
representatives accurately reflect the aspirations of the
people and enact laws and regulations that would further
democracy and benefit society. Only then can the
relationship between Taiwan and China be established with
the full consent of Taiwanese.
Taiwan’s democracy has been hijacked by the KMT, whose
pro-unification ideology represents the voice of a small
minority, yet dominates the political landscape.
STAN YANG
Laguna Hills, California |