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A man takes pictures at a park filled with statues of Chiang Kai-shek in Taiwan. Ten people have been charged with defacing the former leader’s tomb at his mausoleum in the northern city of Taoyuan. Photo: AFP

10 Taiwanese protesters charged with vandalising Chiang Kai-shek’s tomb

Activists indicted for ‘damage and disrespect’ after pouring paint on former leader’s coffin on anniversary of nationalist massacre

Taiwan

Protesters who vandalised Chiang Kai-shek’s tomb in Taiwan have been charged in a case that highlights divided opinion on how to deal with the island’s authoritarian past.

Ten people splashed red paint on the former Kuomintang ruler’s coffin in late February, on the 71st anniversary of a nationalist massacre estimated to have killed as many as 28,000.

The activists demanded the government erase all tributes to Chiang and his son, saying they were dictators who oversaw the decades-long “White Terror” political purge that saw thousands executed.

Taiwan has evolved into a fully fledged democracy since martial law was lifted in 1987, but it was only in December that a bill was passed to tackle the legacy of such injustices.

Chiang’s mausoleum in the northern city of Taoyuan has been closed to the public since the incident and the protesters were indicted on Tuesday for damage and disrespect of a public memorial.

In a statement prosecutors said Taiwan “gives the maximum protection to any political and historical interpretations or beliefs, within the scope of freedom of speech, but the means of expression still needs to abide by the law”.

Some of the defendants are students while others belong to activist groups including the Free Taiwan Party, which advocates Taiwan as an independent country from China.

For many young people on the island, Chiang is also synonymous with the authoritarianism that wary Taiwanese now equate with mainland China, which still views the island as part of its territory.

But plenty still revere him as a hero for leading his Kuomintang (KMT) troops against Communist forces and fighting the Japanese during the second world war.

His supporters – including leading KMT politicians and retired military officers – gathered outside Chiang’s main memorial hall in the capital Taipei on Tuesday calling for the protection of the former ruler’s legacy.

They are worried that the bill passed in December – which calls for authoritarian rule to be “stripped of legitimacy” – would see the landmark repurposed.

As ordered by the law, Taiwan’s cabinet appointed a committee last week to conduct an investigation into repression under the Chiangs, grant justice to those who were wrongly persecuted and remove authoritarian symbols from public places.

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