Human rights activists were planning a two-hour protest demonstration outside President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) hotel in Seattle yesterday afternoon.
Ma, who has just completed a 10-day state visit to Central America, was not scheduled to make any public appearances during his transit stop, but the protesters wanted to talk with him in private before he flies home.
EMBARRASSING
The protest could prove embarrassing because Ma has deliberately kept a very low profile in the US. News of the demonstration outside the Sheraton Hotel in downtown Seattle would be the first that the vast majority of Americans hear about his presence in the country.
Organizers expect between 100 and 200 demonstrators — most from the Seattle area — with some coming from as far as Portland, Oregon, and Vancouver, British Columbia.
They plan to wave signs reading “One Taiwan — One China” and “President Ma not Mr Ma” and to hand out leaflets alleging human rights violations under the Ma administration.
“President Ma will certainly know we are outside his hotel, but the real mission is to make more Americans aware of what is happening in Taiwan and to encourage the American government to break its silence and speak out in favor of Taiwanese self-determination,” said Brock Freeman, one of the organizers.
“We don’t expect President Ma to meet with us, but if he does we will say that just because he was elected he does not have the right to trample on human rights, suppress freedom of speech and march Taiwan towards unification with China,” Freeman said.
In a statement posted on the Internet by “multiple organizations supporting human rights for the Taiwanese” the protest organizers said a new “worrying development” has emerged at recent rallies in Taiwan.
‘BLACK SHIRTS’
The statement says that violent pro-Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) supporters known as “black shirts” are inciting violence at peaceful protests and their actions are being blatantly ignored by police.
“In one incident, students attacked by the black shirts were hauled into the police station, questioned for hours and told to stay away from further rallies,” the statement said.
“Our Seattle demonstration will absolutely be a peaceful event. We will talk with people in the street and try to get them involved and press them to let their elected officials know they are concerned about what is happening in Taiwan,” Freeman said.
“Above all, we want to help the people of America understand what is really going on in Taiwan,” he said.
Taiwan is stepping up plans to create self-sufficient supply chains for combat drones and increase foreign orders from the US to counter China’s numerical superiority, a defense official said on Saturday. Commenting on condition of anonymity, the official said the nation’s armed forces are in agreement with US Admiral Samuel Paparo’s assessment that Taiwan’s military must be prepared to turn the nation’s waters into a “hellscape” for the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA). Paparo, the commander of the US Indo-Pacific Command, reiterated the concept during a Congressional hearing in Washington on Wednesday. He first coined the term in a security conference last
DEFENSE: The National Security Bureau promised to expand communication and intelligence cooperation with global partners and enhance its strategic analytical skills China has not only increased military exercises and “gray zone” tactics against Taiwan this year, but also continues to recruit military personnel for espionage, the National Security Bureau (NSB) said yesterday in a report to the Legislative Yuan. The bureau submitted the report ahead of NSB Director-General Tsai Ming-yen’s (蔡明彥) appearance before the Foreign and National Defense Committee today. Last year, the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) conducted “Joint Sword-2024A and B” military exercises targeting Taiwan and carried out 40 combat readiness patrols, the bureau said. In addition, Chinese military aircraft entered Taiwan’s airspace 3,070 times last year, up about
A magnitude 4.3 earthquake struck eastern Taiwan's Hualien County at 8:31am today, according to the Central Weather Administration (CWA). The epicenter of the temblor was located in Hualien County, about 70.3 kilometers south southwest of Hualien County Hall, at a depth of 23.2km, according to the administration. There were no immediate reports of damage resulting from the quake. The earthquake's intensity, which gauges the actual effect of a temblor, was highest in Taitung County, where it measured 3 on Taiwan's 7-tier intensity scale. The quake also measured an intensity of 2 in Hualien and Nantou counties, the CWA said.
The Overseas Community Affairs Council (OCAC) yesterday announced a fundraising campaign to support survivors of the magnitude 7.7 earthquake that struck Myanmar on March 28, with two prayer events scheduled in Taipei and Taichung later this week. “While initial rescue operations have concluded [in Myanmar], many survivors are now facing increasingly difficult living conditions,” OCAC Minister Hsu Chia-ching (徐佳青) told a news conference in Taipei. The fundraising campaign, which runs through May 31, is focused on supporting the reconstruction of damaged overseas compatriot schools, assisting students from Myanmar in Taiwan, and providing essential items, such as drinking water, food and medical supplies,