News: Taiwan President and Vice President Shot During Election Campaign

Oh, My…. A friend from Taiwan just sent the news that everyone is being sent home from work because people are worried that there may be some violence or backlash to come. Violence of this kind has never marred the “China” political spectrum before.

You can’t just attempt to assassinate a president! (said in the most indignant voice!!! -Well, you can but you shouldn’t!) even if you hate his politics.

Thing is tomorrow is the reelection, (you wouldn’t really know it from the news articles would you?) and if Chen Shui-Bian was killed then the elections would be completely cancelled under Taiwan’s constitution. Which must be the reason for this -then again it could be as incomprehensible as an attempt to get the attention of a famous actress, ala Regan/Jodie Foster episode.

Really I just want to sit at home, rest and recover from my flu, but when my friend called with the news, of course I bolted out of bed and onto the computer to read up on it as we discussed the whole thing. This is completely unexpected, even to Chen and his handlers because he wasn’t wearing a bullet proof vest…

Another ridiculous day where people use violence to speak their thoughts.

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Taiwan President and Vice President Shot During Election Campaign

TAIPEI, (AFP) – Taiwan’s president and vice president were both shot during the final day of the island’s election campaign, but their conditions were not life-threatening, an aide said.

President Chen Shui-bian was hit in the stomach and Vice President Annette Lu was hit in the knee as they were driven through the streets of the southern town of Tainan in campaigning for Saturday’s presidential vote, said Chen’s spokesman Chiou I-jen.

The pair were rushed to the Chi Mei hospital in the town 300 kilometres (180 miles) south of Taipei but their lives were not in danger and the elections were scheduled to go ahead as planned, Chiou told reporters in Taipei.

Nobody has claimed responsibility for the shooting which comes at the end of a bitter and divisive campaign fought over the island’s relations with mainland China. It was unclear how the incident would affect the poll.

“We confirm that at 1.45pm the president when campaigning in Tainan was shot,” said Chiou, the secretary general of the presidential office, adding that doctors had removed a bullet from the president’s stomach.

“She (Lu) first felt a pain on her right knee and thought it could have been caused by a firecracker. The president also later felt that his stomach was wet.”

Chen, 53, and Lu, 59, are both outspoken supporters of Taiwanese independence, a stance which has seen them vilified by the Chinese government which claims the island as part of its territory.

Television pictures showed Chen waving to the crowds from the back of a red four wheel-drive vehicle alongside Lu, with motorcycle outriders by his side.

A white-jacketed security guard was seen standing directly behind Lu as part of a large motorcade. The shooting incident was not shown by local television, but the red car was later shown being driven away with what appeared to be a bullet hole in the windscreen.

“The bullet hit … Vice President Annette Lu before hitting Chen Shui-bian’s stomach,” said lawmaker Wang Sing-nan from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party, who was with Chen at the hospital.

Both Chen and opposition challenger Lien Chan spent Friday doing last-minute campaigning in the south of the island ahead of the election in which the two rivals are reported to be running neck and neck.

The National Security Council said it had stepped up security for opposition Kuomintang (KMT) candidate Chen and his deputy James Soong following the shooting. Both the Kuomintang and the DPP were due to hold final campaign rallies on Friday night.

The campaign has been long and spiteful, with much acrimony over Chen’s plans to hold a referendum vote separate from the presidential election centred on relations between the island and mainland China.

The referendum is seen as an attempt by Chen to push the island further down the road towards independence, something China has threatened to oppose by military force.

The referendum has been criticised by France, Japan, Germany, the European Union and, most crucially in a rare rebuke, by its biggest ally, protector and arms supplier, the United States.

The result of the election — and the two-question referendum that runs alongside it — will be closely monitored by China.

China and Taiwan split at the end of a civil war in 1949. Despite over half a century of de facto independent rule on Taiwan, the government in Beijing still claims the island is a renegade province which must be brought back under its rule.

taiwanshooting.jpg
The car Chen was in before the shooting occured

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Shouting to be heard over the cheering crowd at a recent campaign rally here, Chou Li-fu explained why he felt so strongly about supporting President Chen Shui-bian in what has been the most competitive and polarizing presidential election campaign in Taiwan’s history.

“We have to say no to China!” the 51-year-old factory manager exclaimed, arguing that Chen would stand up to Beijing and prevent a rush to invest in the mainland that could leave the island too dependent on its giant neighbor. “The survival of Taiwan is at stake,” he said. “We want to tell the world Taiwan is an independent, democratic country.”

Across town at another rally, Chang Shen-an agreed the election could decide Taiwan’s future. But the retired nurse wanted to kick Chen out of office. “If he continues talking about independence and provoking China, the Chinese Communists will attack us,” said Chang, 76, who favors Chen’s opponent, Nationalist Party leader Lien Chan, in Saturday’s election. “Independence is impossible for Taiwan — we’re too small, and they’re too big. We should focus on the economy instead, and we can’t do that by isolating ourselves from the mainland.”

After a long, divisive campaign that both China and the United States have followed with concern, the 23 million people of Taiwan will elect a president and choose between two sharply different views of how this self-governing island should deal with China, its booming economy and its growing political and military clout. In doing so, they may change the dynamics of one of the most dangerous military and diplomatic standoffs in the world.

China claims sovereignty over Taiwan, has threatened to attack it if it formally declares independence and is accelerating a military buildup on its side of the 100-mile-wide Taiwan Strait that already includes about 500 missiles. Meanwhile, Taiwan says it is already independent and has been developing a national identity separate from China. The United States has urged both sides to maintain the status quo but has vowed to help defend Taiwan if it is attacked.

Both presidential candidates in Taiwan have promised not to provoke a war. But Chen, who has struggled to govern because he won the presidency with only 39 percent of the vote in 2000 and has trailed Lien in public opinion polls for much of the year, managed to narrow the gap in recent months by stepping up the anti-China rhetoric and proposing that a referendum be held on the same day as the presidential election. The move prompted a series of strong warnings by China, which has long opposed any referendum in Taiwan as a potential step toward an island-wide vote on independence.

Chen has resisted stronger economic ties with the mainland unless Beijing grants security and political concessions. He has also promised to write a new constitution for the island and call a referendum to approve it within two years, a move that China has said could amount to a declaration of independence and prompt a military response.

Lien has pledged a more conciliatory approach toward China, which his party ruled under Chiang Kai-shek before it lost the civil war against the Communists and retreated to Taiwan in 1949. He has made a priority of further economic integration with China — by establishing direct air and shipping links, for example — and argued that issues related to Taiwan’s sovereignty should be set aside for future generations to resolve.

Polls indicate the race is a statistical dead heat, and turnout is expected to approach 90 percent.

The sharp divide presents a significant challenge to Taiwan’s young democracy, which managed its first transfer of power between political parties only four years ago. Though the threat of Chinese military intervention is slim to none at the moment and there is great public pride in the island’s democratic transformation, there is also growing frustration with the divisiveness of political debate in Taiwan, as well as with government corruption.

Newspapers and television stations remain largely under the influence of one party or the other, public confidence in the courts’ ability to serve as neutral arbiters of the law is low, and secret, multimillion-dollar donations to politicians are the norm. A recent study found that less than 50 percent of residents in Taiwan agree that democracy is the best system of government under all circumstances, one of the lowest ratings in newly democratic nations surveyed in Asia.

“This is not a very assuring sign,” said Chu Yun-han, the political scientist at Academica Sinica who conducted the study. “People are upset by the increase in conflict in society.”

The presidential campaign, with its focus on mainland China and Taiwanese nationalism, has further exacerbated lingering tensions between a majority whose families go back generations in Taiwan and a minority whose families arrived from the mainland in 1949 and were given preferential treatment by Chiang’s authoritarian government.

Wang Benhu, the island’s most popular talk show host, said society is so divided and the issues are so emotional that a close election could lead to allegations of voter fraud and, potentially, riots. “Especially if Chen loses, Taiwan will be even more split, and I’m afraid there will eventually be violence,” he said.

In Beijing, the results also could strengthen or undermine the leadership of President Hu Jintao, the new Communist Party chief who approved a moderate approach to the election and who has been under pressure from rivals trying to use that against him, Chinese officials said.

China has refrained from a stronger response to the campaign, such as military exercises or missile tests, tactics it had employed before previous elections in Taiwan. Instead, it persuaded the Bush administration to publicly rebuke Chen and pressure him into softening Saturday’s ballot questions. Voters will be asked whether Taiwan should try to establish a framework for cross-strait talks and whether it should boost military spending if China refuses to remove the missiles it has aimed at the island.

China’s strategy reflects a belief by many in Beijing that a more forceful approach could prompt a backlash among voters in Taiwan and tip the race in Chen’s favor, according to Chinese officials, military officers and others involved in the policymaking process who spoke on condition of anonymity.

They said it also represents a significant gamble by Hu, who took office a year ago and has yet to consolidate his grip on power. Though there is a general consensus among the leadership on Taiwan policy, there are sharp differences of opinion at other levels of the party, the government and the Chinese military. Some have argued that China is relying too heavily on the United States to deter Taiwan and should be building up its forces on the strait, while others have said the government suffered a blow to its credibility by allowing Taiwan to defy warnings against holding a referendum.

If Chen is reelected, the officials said, Hu will be vulnerable because he is the head of the party leadership group that manages Taiwan policy. His chief rival, Vice President Zeng Qinghong, is heading a similar leadership group on Hong Kong affairs and has taken a hard line against democracy activists demanding universal suffrage there.

But if Lien wins the election — and if a majority of eligible voters follow his lead and refuse to vote in the referendum, thus invalidating it — Hu could claim a major victory. The question then becomes whether he will be willing to risk offering concessions to Lien, who has proposed making an unprecedented trip to China before taking office in May if he is elected.

Published by Yan Sham-Shackleton

Yan Sham-Shackleton is a Hong Kong writer who lives in Los Angeles. This is her old blog Glutter written mostly in Hong Kong from 2003 to 2007. Although it was a personal blog, Yan focused a lot on free speech issues and democratic movement in Hong Kong. She moved to the US in 2007.

5 thoughts on “News: Taiwan President and Vice President Shot During Election Campaign

  1. I heard about this news on the radio this morning, as I drove to a job interview.
    I understand a shot just grazed Chen’s stomach, as seen in the photos when following your link. the would required about 14 stitches.
    Are we seeing a global upswing in high-profile political violence as political speech? (al Qaeda, Islamaah Jamiah, Abu Sayyef, FARC, assasination attempts (poss China, radicals, PLO, Israel, etc.))

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  2. Well, if you think about. Your WHOLE life is pretty much at the whim of the universe. What’s one employer, who you mostly likely to grow to dislike, find incompetent, and feel he or she is exploiting you, not paying you enough and don’t give you the respect and acknowledgement of all your hard work! 🙂
    Good Luck.
    Yan

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