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Updated Friday, June 26, 2009 9:55 am TWN, CNA DPP chair launches drive for ex-president's release“The detention lacks legal necessity and legitimacy. Through this action, we want to highlight the unreasonableness of the existing detention system,” Tsai said in a news conference. Tsai said she hopes the drive will help muster the power of the public to promote reforms to the judicial system. Co-sponsors of the action included former Academia Sinica President Lee Yuan-tseh, Taiwan Bar Association Chairman Wellington Koo, Judicial Reform Foundation Chairman Huang Jui-ming, former Awakening Foundation Chairwoman Lee Yuan chen, and Academic Sinica academician Chen Chien-jen. Also on the list were Chen Hwei-syin, dean of the College of Law at National Chengchi University, Academia Sinica research fellows Michael Hsiao and Chiu Hei-yuan, and Ku Chung-hwa, chairman of the Citizen Congress Watch. According to a statement signed by the initiators, the court's decision to continue the detention of Chen “seriously undermined the credibility of the judiciary.” The decision, the statement said, was based solely on irrelevant grounds, such as that Chen has denied he committed any crime, that he has published a book while in detention, that he has accepted visits from foreign journalists, that he has applied to rejoin the DPP, and that he has claimed he is not in good health. Although the alleged irregularities involving Chen and his family are “disappointing,” his rights as a defendant must be upheld, according to the statement. The former president was first detained Nov. 12, 2008 and released Dec. 13 following his indictment on charges of embezzlement, corruption and money laundering. He was detained again Dec. 30 after the Taipei District Court approved a request by prosecutors to take him back into custody. Rejecting Chen's repeated requests to be freed on bail, the court ruled in March and again in May to continue his detention. Chen and his wife Wu Shu-chen are accused of siphoning off NT$104 million (US$3.15 million) from a special Presidential Office discretionary fund during his presidency from 2000 to May 2008. They are also charged with accepting bribes in connection with a land procurement deal and kickbacks to help a contractor win the tender for a government construction project. They allegedly wired and stashed the funds overseas secretly through various intermediaries. The couple is still being probed on suspicion of helping several financial conglomerates acquire financial holding companies in return for “political contributions.” Subscribe to The China Post and save 25%. Click here Comments June 29, 2009 dpppeopleofjerk.rock@ Beware! They plan to fool and rob us AGAIN. June 30, 2009 eddie@ cuckoo@ wrote: Yeah.. or probably just another election stunt ahead of election season to garner the votes of the deep-green. This has nothing to do with the rights of Chen Shui-bian, justice, or anything else. It's politics at its worst.DPP Chairwoman Tsai. Don't you know another DPP legislator Kuo Wen-cheng will be arraigned for allegedly taking bribes of NT$ 2 million from the bus company... Tsai. Why are you and the DPP was so concerned about Ex-Chen? Is there any confidential secrecy inside the DPP that Ex Chen will expose to the court and to the public? |
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Tsai. Why are you and the DPP was so concerned about Ex-Chen? Is there any confidential secrecy inside the DPP that Ex Chen will expose to the court and to the public?