. Earth Science News .
Protesters Demand Chen Shui-Bian Resign

Taiwan's leader, Chen Shui-bian. Photo courtesy of AFP.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (XNA) Sep 12, 2006
Hundreds of thousands of protesters took to the streets in Taipei Saturday and thousands remained in the rain as night fell vowing never to leave until the island's leader Chen Shui-bian resigns.

Shih Ming-teh, former chairman of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), led a long column of protesters wearing red T-shirts in a mid-day parade to Chen's downtown office. They shouted slogans while giving the thumbs-down sign which has become a trademark gesture of the protesters.

Taiwan media said a mass sit-in was scheduled to last until 9 p.m., but Shih said he would remain outside the downtown office, along with other willing protesters, until Chen quits.

Shih said on Saturday afternoon that the sit-in would last until Chen resigns. He had asked that the mass protest resume again at 3 p.m. Sunday.

"So many people are standing here today to demand Chen resign, which shows the people of Taiwan know the difference between right and wrong," said Shih.

"When Chen commits corruption, Taiwan people have the right to oust him," said Shih. He said if Chen refused to resign, Taiwan would be "paralyzed" and Chen would become a "prisoner" of his office.

Shih led people in chants of "Chen, step down" during his speech.

On Saturday afternoon, people formed a giant "totem" pattern --a bow compass symbolizing rules. The pattern also looks like a warrior, with a broadsword in hand, cut down the corrupt regime, which represents humans beseeching power from heaven, according to a spokesman for the headquarters.

Ma Ying-jeou, chairman of the Chinese Kuomintang Party, and James Soong, chairman of the People First Party, joined in the mass sit-in in the evening.

According to the organizer, the number of people participating in the street protest topped 300,000 on the first day. They were clad in red T-shirts, forming a red sea showing the anger of the mass.

A Taiwan newspaper opinion poll found that 68.5 percent of Taiwan residents support the campaign to oust Chen Shui-bian.

On Aug. 12, Shih Ming-teh launched the "one million people oust Chen Shui-bian" campaign to force the Taiwan leader to step down after some of his family members were implicated in a series of scandals.

Last week Chen admitted that he had used other people's receipts to write off his official expenses and that his family accepted free coupons from a local businessman to shop at the Sogo department store, according to media reports from Taiwan.

Source: Xinhua News Agency

Related Links
-

Down Mexico way In 2006
Washington (UPI) Sep 08, 2006
While Washington plays at Fourth Generation cabinet wars in far-off places, a genuine Fourth Generation threat is brewing up on America's southern border. After 70 years of stability under the dictatorship of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, Mexico drank deeply of the neo-conservatives' patent medicine, democracy, in the 1990s. At first, all hailed the seemingly happy results.







  • Trauma Expert Crusades For Changes In Disaster Preparedness And Recovery
  • China To Build Earthquake Warning System At Three Gorges Reservoir Area
  • Interview: Katrina Lessons Learned
  • Katrina Response A 'Systemic Failure': Former US Emergency Response Chief

  • Climate Change Rocked Cradles Of Civilization
  • Precision Climate Modeling Is Forecast
  • Siberian Lakes Burp Time-Bomb Greenhouse Gas
  • Greenhouse Gas Bubbling From Melting Permafrost Feeds Climate Warming

  • Smoke Plume Dispersal From The World Trade Center Disaster
  • Acoustic Data May Reveal Hidden Gas And Oil Supplies
  • DMC International Imaging Wins 2nd Year Contract To Monitor Amazonian Rainforest
  • What Is It Like To Be On A NASA Hurricane Mission

  • China Urged To Introduce Fuel Tax And Energy-Saving Fund
  • Researchers Aim To Enhance Air Vehicle Systems
  • Chemical Screening system helps evaluate PEM Fuel Cell Materials
  • High-Value Chemicals Produced From Ethanol Feedstocks Could Boost Biorefinery Economics

  • China Should Allow AIDS Patients And NGOs Proper Voice Says UN
  • China Will Not Be Hit Hard By Bird Flu This Fall
  • Satellites Track Migratory Birds In Fight Against Avian Influenza
  • Cancer Surge Overwhelming AIDS-Crisis Botswana

  • NASA Study Solves Ocean Plant Mystery
  • Virus May Control Carp The Australian River Rabbit
  • Ocean Seep Mollusks May Share Evolutionary History With Other Deep-Sea Creatures
  • Genetic Surprise Confirms Neglected 70-Year-Old Evolutionary Theory

  • Five dead, 6,000 Poisoned In Ivory Coast Toxic Waste Disaster
  • Arsenic Pollutes River In Central China
  • China Lead Poisoning Caused By Substandard Waste System
  • Analysis: No Room For Shangri-La In China

  • Modern Humans, Not Neandertals, May Be Evolution's 'Odd Man Out'
  • Too Many Men Could Destabilize Society
  • How Did Our Ancestors' Minds Really Work
  • Ancient Rock Art In Australia Threatened By Major Gas Project

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement