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    Few takers for post as chief of security at Chen's residence

    By Rich Chang
    STAFF REPORTER
    Tuesday, Jun 06, 2006, Page 2

    In a sign of how unpopular President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) and his family have become, the National Police Agency (NPA) said that it was having difficulty filling the vacant position of chief of security at the presidential residence -- a job once coveted as a springboard to higher positions.

    Former chief of security for the presidential residence Lee Chiu-ming (李秋明) left the post early last month, but the NPA has not found a replacement.

    The Chinese language newspaper the China Times yesterday quoted an NPA official as saying that "because President Chen Shui-bian and his family are facing a political storm, some officials who were vying for the post have said they are no longer interested in the job."

    The NPA yesterday declined to comment further.

    The alleged insider trading of Taiwan Development Corp (TDC) shares involving Chen's son in-law Chao Chien-ming (趙建銘), which first came to light in the middle of last month, has turned the president and his relatives into near-pariahs, with many government employees now wary of having too close an association with the first family.

    Changing times

    It didn't used to be this way. Commissioner of the NPA's Immigration Office Wu Chen-chi (吳振吉) was the first security chief for the presidential residence when Chen became president in 2000.

    He left the office in August 2001 when he was promoted to director of the Keelung City Police Department. Within five years, Wu was again promoted to commissioner of the Aviation Police Bureau and then to his current post. Wu was expected to become the first director of the proposed Cabinet-level Immigration Administration.

    Wu's job at the presidential residence was turned over to former Taipei police official Hsieh Fen-fen (謝芬芬), who cultivated close ties with Chen and first lady Wu Shu-jen (吳淑珍) during Chen's stint as Taipei mayor.

    In March 2003, Hsieh was appointed chief of the Ilan County Police Department -- becoming the nation's first female county police chief -- despite accusations of favoritism from the opposition party.

    Wu and Hsieh became members of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) in January 2003 as part of the DPP's attempt to turn the police force more "green."

    Hsieh was replaced as chief of security at the presidential office by Lee, who was Chen's senior high school classmate in Tainan City. His appointment in May as chief of the Keelung Harbor Police Office was not seen as a good promotion.

    The NPA official told the China Times that there has been much discussion of Lee's mediocre appointment, with some saying that Chen and the first family's influence on police appointments has faded.

    To avoid being caught up in the political maelstrom now engulfing the first family, many officials are sitting tight for now, preferring to see how the scandals play out before pursuing the job as presidential residence security chief.

    Building `guanxi'

    In the past, chiefs of Chen's bodyguard detachment have also been put on the fast track to promotions.

    The first chief of Chen's bodyguard detachment Yu Lien-fa (余連發) was promoted to director of the Military Intelligence Bureau (MIB) in May 2004, and his rank rose to general when he was appointed to the Armed Forces Reserve commander in June last year.

    Yu has been the subject of a military probe since last month in connection with a stock-trading scandal.

    Another military official, Peng Sheng-chu (彭勝竹), who replaced Yu as the chief of Chen's bodyguard detachment, became chief of the MIB in June last year. This past March, he was promoted to vice chief of the general staff and became a general.

    The president's political opponents have claimed that the reason both Yu and Peng rose so fast is that they enjoyed good relations with the president.
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