Chiang Kai-shek's name restored to Taipei monument

To avoid interruption or disturbances by opponents, the MOE sought assistance from the Taipei City Government to assign police with barricades erected at major entrances to the complex to ensure public safety and smooth progress of the work.

After the reinstatement of the original name plaque, the contents of an exhibition room featuring artifacts and documents related to the late president will also be rearranged.

"We will follow the principles of pragmatism, diversity and truth in presenting the late president's life story and career achievements," Lu said, adding that the exhibition will highlight Taiwan's democratic spirit, as well as its cultural and ethnic diversity.

Lu said the dismantled Taiwan Democracy Memorial Hall plaque will be properly preserved in the hall's storage house just like the Ta Chung Chih Cheng plaque that was removed earlier.

DPP chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen quickly condemned the move, saying her party could not condone a "measure under which the nation's public assets are used to commemorate a dictator who has slaughtered his own people."

Tsai said the plaque restoration marks the bankruptcy of President Ma Ying-jeou's credibility because he had promised that his government would hold public forums to discuss the issue before taking any concrete actions.

Presidential Office spokesman Wang Yu-chi said Ma has not backed off from his promise, as the MOE has already held three public seminars to solicit opinions from various sectors of society.

"Opinions expressed during those sessions supported the restoration of the plaque," he added.

Meanwhile, Government Information Office Minister Su Jun-pin said the MOE has followed the due process of law in carrying out the name plaque replacement project.

"The Executive Yuan will continue to direct all government agencies to hear the voices of various political groups," Su said, adding that open-mindedness is the best way to forge social consensus.

The DPP and its supporters blame Chiang for the 228 Incident on Feb. 28, 1947 in which then-Taiwan Governor Chen Yi, dispatched by Chiang to take over Taiwan after the Japanese pullout, sent troops to crack down on public disturbances.

The disturbances were sparked by a street vendor resisting arrest after being caught for selling untaxed cigarettes in Taipei. Many earlier and new immigrants to the island were killed in violent confrontations.

Chen, who received military training in Japan and married a Japanese wife, was later tried and executed for colluding with Chinese Communists.

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Chiang Kai-shek's name restored to Taipei monument
Police sent by the Taipei City Government at the request of the Ministry of Education help maintain order outside the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall as the original name plaque of ...

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