Sunflower leaders to form new activist organization
Mon, May 19, 2014 By Chris Wang / Staff reporter
Sunflower movement leaders Lin Fei-fan (林飛帆) and
Chen Wei-ting (陳為廷)
yesterday announced the establishment of a new social activist group, Taiwan
March (島國前進),
saying the group would focus on the “unfinished business” of the
three-week-long movement’s goal of promoting “direct democracy.”
“It seemed to us that President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) and the
Chinese Nationalist Party [KMT] have not learned a thing [from the Sunflower
movement] and they still refuse to listen to the public,” Chen told a press
conference.
Having vowed to keep safeguarding Taiwan’s democracy after the
Sunflower movement withdrew from the Legislative Yuan on April 10 — which they
occupied to protest against what they described as the opaque negotiation of
the cross-strait service trade agreement — Chen said the government has not
changed.
“In the past month, the government has insisted on its own version
of a statute to monitor cross-strait agreements, tried to push through the
statute on the free economic pilot zones and launched a counter-offensive
against the campaign to recall KMT lawmakers,” Chen said.
“What’s worse, the Ma administration began its judicial
persecution against the protesters after they pulled out of the legislature,”
added Chen, who is a student at National
Tsing Hua
University .
The group’s name, Taiwan
March, indicates the group’s determination to keep marching forward and to
highlight the month the Sunflower movement rose up.
The group’s founders include Academia Sinica associate research
fellow Huang Kuo-chang (黃國昌)
and Shih Hsin University assistant professor Frida Tsai (蔡培慧), as
well as students and citizens.
The group’s goal is to “drive Taiwanese politics with social
forces,” said Lin, a National
Taiwan University
graduate student.
However, he reiterated that the group would not establish a new
political party, nor would it recommend candidates in future elections.
The group’s first task, Lin said, would be promoting the lowering
of the threshold of the Referendum Act (公民投票法), known as a “bird cage” act,
among a wide range of issues.
Next up is the free-trade issue, with a comprehensive discussion
about how Taiwan
should position itself in the free-trade system, which the group does not
oppose, Lin said, to safeguard people’s wellbeing and the national interests at
the same time.
On other issues, such as the cross-strait service trade pact and
the statute governing the economic pilot zones, Lin said that the group would
collaborate with other social groups, including Democracy Kuroshio (民主黑潮),
Democracy Tautin (民主鬥陣),
the Black Island Nation Youth Front (黑色島國青年聯盟) and the Appendectomy Project (割闌尾計畫).
The founding of Taiwan
March and separate efforts by various groups should not be interpreted as
“division of the core leadership of the Sunflower movement,” Lin said.
“It’s just that each group shared the same goal, but decided to
tackle different issues with various approaches,” he said.
Lin also denied that the group had any connection with the Taiwan
Citizen Union (公民組合),
a political group initiated by former Democratic Progressive Party chairman Lin
I-hsiung (林義雄).
Structure of the Lead:
WHO- Sunflower movement leaders Lin
Fei-fan (林飛帆) and Chen Wei-ting (陳為廷)
WHEN-yesterday
WHAT-
announced the establishment of a new social activist group, Taiwan March (島國前進)
WHY- goal of promoting “direct
democracy.”
Keywords:
1.Chinese Nationalist Party 國民黨
2. press conference記者會
3.opaque不透明的
4. judicial 司法的
5. persecution 迫害
6.reiterate重申
7.threshold門檻
8. petition 請求
9. tackle解決
I think that I will support Lin Fei-fan and Chen Wei-ting.
回覆刪除Because I think that they do a good job to express their conditions.
In my opinion, I will also support Lin Fei-fan and Chen Wei-ting.
回覆刪除I think what they have done is helpful for Taiwan.
It can make the government value what citizens think.
In order to protect the future of Taiwan,being an independent country, I'll also support the sunflower movement.
回覆刪除I admire the leaders that they can hold such an extensive movement to convey citizens' thought to the government.