Su also said that the Government Information Office (GIO) was not qualified to criticize the NCC for failing to take back the two radio frequencies.
"Over the past seven years, it [the GIO] has had opportunities to take back those frequencies, but all eight ministers who have presided over this endeavor have done absolutely nothing," he said.
Shyr pointed to what he perceived as ludicrous allegations in the GIO's press releases.
Shyr said that while Shieh claimed he had been looking into the BCC deal for four months, in the past week Shieh's statement had changed from "it is affirmed that NCC members are suspected of misconduct" to "the NCC might be suspected of misconduct."
Shieh also changed his statement when he referred to the evidence of misconduct -- from "solid evidence" to "media reports," Shyr said.
Meanwhile, Jaw went to the Taipei District Prosecutors' Office yesterday to file a lawsuit against Shieh and Hsu.
"I accuse the pair of slander, offenses relating to the protection of secrets and the Law for the Protection of Computer-managed Personal Information (電腦處理個人資料保護法)," Jaw told reporters.
He said the pair alleged he had spent between NT$600 million and NT$700 million to buy the BCC, but he had spent several times that amount.
He said that the pair accused him of using front companies to buy the BCC, but these were real companies.
He said he did not accept the Executive Yuan's suspension order and would file a lawsuit to Taipei High Administrative Court.
In response to the Cabinet's decision, the KMT caucus threatened to sue Premier Chang Chun-hsiung (
KMT Legislator Hsu Shao-ping (
"The KMT believes the Cabinet is not the superior of the NCC," she said.
"The Cabinet ignored the Grand Justices' interpretation. We plan to sue Chang Chun-hsiung and Shieh Jhy-wey in a bid to defend the nation's democratic and constitutional mechanisms," she said.
Additional reporting by Flora Wang and Rich Chang



