[After my visits to two prisons when Connie and I visited Taiwan a couple of weeks ago, I wrote the following Op-Ed for the Taipei Times. It was published Friday, December 30, 2011 and is reprinted in full here with full permission.]
How
many generations does it take to grow a democracy? I asked this question as I
read about Russia and thought of my recent visit to two prisons in Taiwan.
Many
are asking the question in Russia today. With Vladimir Putin seeking to extend
his rule by subverting democratic elections and other human rights, people have taken to the streets in unprecedented
numbers.
A couple of weeks ago, the White Terror era was graphically
brought to mind when my old friend, Hsieh Tsung-min, and his wife took me to
visit The Jing-mei Human Rights Memorial Park, located at the site of the
former Detention Center of the Taiwan Garrison Command. I had visited the site
in 2008, but not with my friend who had been incarcerated there for many years.
Mr.
Hsieh, who on had been arrested a week before me in 1971, took me on a personal
tour of the facility that included the cell he occupied. My former wife and I
had been charged with “activities unfriendly to the government of the Republic
of China”, put under house arrest, and expelled, whereas our friends and
colleagues, Hsieh and Wei T’ing-chao were tried in secret after a year and a
half in custody, served long sentences, and were horribly tortured.
The tiny
cell where Hsieh had been held was hard for me to look at and almost as hard to
view the drawings in the museum of the torture he described in a letter
smuggled out in 1972.
All
of the inhuman treatment of political prisoners and the climate of terror
created by Chiang Kai-shek and his security agencies came rushing back through
the forty years as if it were yesterday.
Three
days after my visit to Jing-mei, I visited the Taipei Prison where former
President Chen Shui-bien is incarcerated.
Cheryl Lai (賴秀如) graciously
accompanied me to translate. When my family returned to Taiwan in 2003 after
thirty years, then President Chen had been extraordinarily kind to us. He had
taken me aside and said that he was sorry that my activities in Taiwan had
caused me to be blacklisted by the U.S. government for nineteen years. On this
visit I wanted to thank him.
Being
allowed to visit him in prison was a reminder that some things have changed
since the beginning of democratization in the 1990s. His buzz cut hair and
orange jump suit underlined the different settings and conditions when we had
last met in 2003. Neither his smile nor his sense of humor had left him. We
both chuckled about Dr. Peng Ming-min coming to visit him and bringing a copy
of his then new book, The Perfect Escape,
published in 2009.
I
came away from the thirty minute meeting with questions that continue to puzzle
me as I think of Taiwan’s path:
Newspaper
accounts of his trials invariably point out that Chen is the first former
president to be indicted and convicted of crime in the history of the ROC. What
is rarely said is that he is also the only non-KMT president in the history of
the ROC. Is that one of the reasons he is in jail?
Although
Chen was President for two terms, the KMT controlled the legislature, the
judiciary, and the central government agencies just as they have from the beginning.
I wonder how his trials, which according to outside legal observers have said “due
process” was so convoluted it is doubtful that the truth of any of the charges
can ever be determined. Chen was emphatic that he does not want a pardon; he
wants a fair re-trial.
Former
President Chen was an unapologetic advocate of an independent Taiwan, which
sent political shivers not only through the KMT but also through the leaders in
Beijing. Is it possible that this is the real reason Chen is in prison? Chen seems
convinced, and I have little reason to doubt it. The
manner in which the KMT-dominated government has conducted the former
President’s trials is enough to question how much Taiwan’s democracy has grown.
Former
presidential adviser Dr. Peng Ming-min heads a new international committee calling for free and
fair elections:
“We have only one sincere but strong demand — that the Jan. 14 elections should be conducted fairly and properly, as fair elections are the minimum requirement for a democratic society and the polls come as a great challenge for Taiwan.”
This
is not 1964 and much has changed since then, but how the January 14 election is
conducted may go far in answering the question in Taiwan, “How many generations
does it take to grow a democracy?”
Milo Thornberry, author of Fireproof
Moth: A Missionary in Taiwan’s White Terror (Sunbury Press, 2011). The Chinese edition was
released on December 10 by the Asian Culture Company.
1 comment:
Thanks for this excellent account, Milo. I'm looking forward with hope-not necessarily with confidence--that the January elections will be conducted fairly.
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