The Control Yuan yesterday impeached three current and former officials of the Ministry of Economic Affairs (MOEA) and one official in the Hualien County government for dereliction of duty in improperly awarding two fishermen excessive compensation for losses they incurred when the ministry decided to construct a harbor in Hualien.
The four impeached are the MOEA Vice Minister Yin Chi-ming (
The investigation report released by the Control Yuan yesterday, states that in 1994, when the MOEA decided to construct the harbor in Hualien to facilitate the import and export of materials by the cement industry, the four men were guilty of sub-standard work when dealing with compensation claims.
The report states that some NT$276 million in compensation paid to two fishermen to cover the loss of two-year fishing licenses, the laying off of 14 employees between them and the enforced retirement of fishing equipment, including boats, was estimated without verification of the items claimed and was of an "obviously inflated" standard. The fishermen were then KMT legislator Yang Chi-hsiung (楊吉雄) and Yu Yuan-chen (游淵琛).
The two fishermen owned two-year fishing licenses, granted by the government, to place fixed fishing nets in the sea at a point so close to the planned harbor that it became part of the construction site. They were entitled to compensation under regulations governing such arrangements.
"The bureau did not follow a standard procedure to inspect, evaluate and negotiate the amount of compensation, but directly approved the amount requested by the fishermen. The whole process of the decision-making is so reckless and obviously with an intention to benefit the two fishermen," said Ku Deng-mei (
Furthermore, the investigation report said that the bureau asked Taiwan Cement Corp, which later acquired exclusive rights to use the harbor for importing and exporting, to pay the compensation without giving it any right to participate in any negotiation.
Although the company agreed to pay the compensation, the report said it was not reasonable for the government to ask it to do so.
"It is not reasonable to ask the company to pay the compensation when it had no right to participate in the process over how much they should pay. The four were irresponsible," the report said.
After learning the result of the investigation, Yin said yesterday afternoon that he thought the amount of compensation was reasonable and that he had not violated any regulation. He said that he felt the result of the investigation was unfair.
The four will be referred to the Committee for the Discipline of Public Functionaries for punishment, which will involve either demerits or dismissal.
Police have issued warnings against traveling to Cambodia or Thailand when others have paid for the travel fare in light of increasing cases of teenagers, middle-aged and elderly people being tricked into traveling to these countries and then being held for ransom. Recounting their ordeal, one victim on Monday said she was asked by a friend to visit Thailand and help set up a bank account there, for which they would be paid NT$70,000 to NT$100,000 (US$2,136 to US$3,051). The victim said she had not found it strange that her friend was not coming along on the trip, adding that when she
TRAGEDY: An expert said that the incident was uncommon as the chance of a ground crew member being sucked into an IDF engine was ‘minuscule’ A master sergeant yesterday morning died after she was sucked into an engine during a routine inspection of a fighter jet at an air base in Taichung, the Air Force Command Headquarters said. The officer, surnamed Hu (胡), was conducting final landing checks at Ching Chuan Kang (清泉崗) Air Base when she was pulled into the jet’s engine for unknown reasons, the air force said in a news release. She was transported to a hospital for emergency treatment, but could not be revived, it said. The air force expressed its deepest sympathies over the incident, and vowed to work with authorities as they
A tourist who was struck and injured by a train in a scenic area of New Taipei City’s Pingsi District (平溪) on Monday might be fined for trespassing on the tracks, the Railway Police Bureau said yesterday. The New Taipei City Fire Department said it received a call at 4:37pm on Monday about an incident in Shifen (十分), a tourist destination on the Pingsi Railway Line. After arriving on the scene, paramedics treated a woman in her 30s for a 3cm to 5cm laceration on her head, the department said. She was taken to a hospital in Keelung, it said. Surveillance footage from a
INFRASTRUCTURE: Work on the second segment, from Kaohsiung to Pingtung, is expected to begin in 2028 and be completed by 2039, the railway bureau said Planned high-speed rail (HSR) extensions would blanket Taiwan proper in four 90-minute commute blocs to facilitate regional economic and livelihood integration, Railway Bureau Deputy Director-General Yang Cheng-chun (楊正君) said in an interview published yesterday. A project to extend the high-speed rail from Zuoying Station in Kaohsiung to Pingtung County’s Lioukuaicuo Township (六塊厝) is the first part of the bureau’s greater plan to expand rail coverage, he told the Liberty Times (sister paper of the Taipei Times). The bureau’s long-term plan is to build a loop to circle Taiwan proper that would consist of four sections running from Taipei to Hualien, Hualien to