Pro-independence groups yesterday called for President Tsai Ing-wen’s (蔡英文) administration to implement localized education and full referendum rights to reinforce Taiwanese identification.
The Taiwan Society and affiliated groups praised the administration’s efforts to settle the issue of the Chinese Nationalist Party’s (KMT) assets, reform pensions and introduce the “five plus two” innovative industries, as well as its New Southbound Policy and Forward-looking Infrastructure Development Program.
However, they called for advancement in educational reform and full referendum rights to deepen democracy and nationalist identification.
Southern Taiwan Society vice president Tiunn Hok-chu (張復聚) said educational reform should focus on native languages to increase Taiwanese identification.
Native language education is now a “mere formality,” as native language proficiency is not part of the college or high-school entrance exams, so students are not committed to learning the languages, Tiunn said.
“People under 30 do not speak Hoklo [commonly known as Taiwanese] at home at all and native languages will not be spoken in another 30 years if the situation persists,” Tiunn said. “Taiwan could lose its multilingual and multicultural heritage and become monopolized by Mandarin, which is not what Taiwanese want.”
Native languages should be a formal part of entrance exams, while a public TV channel devoted to Hoklo language and culture should be established for Hoklo-speaking people, who make up 74 percent of the population, he said.
The share of classical Chinese in language education should be reduced from 50 percent to 30 percent and the focus of history courses should be shifted from a China-centric perspective to a broader worldview that places Taiwan in the frame of East Asian history, Northern Taiwan Society deputy chairman Lee Chuan-hsin (李川信) said.
Citing a promise made by Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) officials that an amendment to the Referendum Act (公民投票法) would be approved by the end of the year, participants urged the government to honor its promise.
The groups called for full referendum rights that would allow citizens to vote on any issues except budgets, taxation or private sector issues.
Currently, a national referendum cannot be held for issues other than reviews of laws; launching or reviewing legislative principles; important policies; or amending the Constitution.
The groups urged the initiation of judicial reform to institute a jury system and eliminate judges who they said were politically biased or had little social experience.
The judiciary “persecuted” former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) while it acquitted former president Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) of charges of corruption and leaking state secrets, they said.
They also urged the government to phase out borough-level elections to root out vote-buying practices they said are common in such elections, echoing calls made by the pan-green camp, which hopes to reduce the KMT’s dominance in local constituencies.
Meanwhile, the groups criticized Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je (柯文哲) for banning flags and banners displaying Taiwanese independence symbols inside Taipei Summer Universiade venues.
Doing so amounted to “eliminating Taiwan” in favor of “Chinese Taipei,” they said.
People carrying independence-leaning flags were forced to hand them in and some were even interrogated by police, and this hurt Taiwan’s democracy, Central Taiwan Society president Liao I-en (廖宜恩) said.
Taiwan Society chairman Chang Yeh-shen (張葉森) added that the DPP should field its own candidate in next year’s Taipei mayoral election instead of renewing the alliance with Ko, who is an independent and whose cross-strait narratives appear to have provoked the ire of pro-independence supporters.
EIGHT KILLED: Three of the four juvenile victims were children of the man suspected of setting the fire at the tire repair shop after a family dispute Four of the eight people killed in a fire in Hsinchu City on Wednesday night were children and the other four were adults who died while trying to rescue the children from the second floor of the burning building, the city’s Fire Bureau said yesterday. Fire Bureau First Corps commander Chang Chih-chih (張智智) told a news conference that the fire at Zheng Yi Tire Repair Shop on Dongda Road might have been intentionally set by the owner’s son, Chen Yen-hsiang (陳彥翔), who earlier had an argument with other family members. Chen allegedly bought gasoline and lit a fire near four motorcycles inside
FIFA World Cup host Qatar has corrected an online application form that listed Taiwan as part of China, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said yesterday. Following the ministry’s protest on Wednesday, “Taiwan” replaced “Taiwan, Province of China” on a dropdown menu on the Web site to apply for a Hayya Card, an identification card all World Cup spectators are required to obtain, ministry spokeswoman Joanne Ou (歐江安) said. “We express our appreciation to the event organizers for their swift response in making the correction and safeguarding the rights of our nation’s fans,” she added. The card also serves as an entry visa for
FIVE QUESTIONED: Customers reported faulty kits after Safeway OA Supply Co allegedly imported poor-quality versions from China and sold them as US-made products The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) yesterday banned the sale and importation of Flowflex COVID-19 rapid test kits, after 2.37 million flawed kits, allegedly made in China, entered the Taiwanese market and were sold to 13 government agencies. According to regulations, the kits should be manufactured in factories in the US, but the importer allegedly imported poor-quality kits from China illegally and sold them as US-made products, FDA section chief Fu Ying-hsien (傅映先) said. The FDA ordered that all Flowflex COVID-19 Antigen Home Tests that were imported by Safeway OA Supply Co Ltd (大鑫資訊) be recalled and warned customers against buying or
NEW TRAVEL REGIME: The CECC advised people to stay put in between quarantine and self-disease prevention, but said that they could apply for a location change Inbound travelers who need to change locations for the four-day self-disease prevention period following their three-day quarantine must apply with their local government, the Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) said yesterday. The “one person per household” principle would remain in place under the new “3+4” quarantine policy, which was implemented yesterday, the center said. More than 4,500 incoming travelers were expected yesterday, including more than 980 people who entered Taiwan in the early morning, said Centers for Disease Control Deputy Director-General Philip Lo (羅一鈞), the CECC’s acting spokesman and medical response division deputy head. Lo said many people had asked the CECC whether