The Kaohsiung District Prosecu-tors' Office yesterday indicted Kaohsiung City Councilor Chen Chun-sheng (
Wu, of the KMT, lost the election to current DPP chairman Frank Hsieh (
Prosecutors said Chen used a fabricated cassette tape to claim that Wu had an affair with a female journalist.
Chen in November 1998 held a press conference to make public the content of the cassette, which contained a lovers' talk between a man and a woman. Chen claimed that the conversation was between the married mayor and a female local journalist. He claimed at the time that an anonymous man provided the tape.
During the campaign Chen, who was running for city councilor, demanded that Wu make an open apology to all of the women of Kaohsiung City and withdraw from the election.
Two days later, Wu sued Chen for libel. Chen later produced three reports that, he said, proved the tape was not fabricated.
During the investigation, pro-secutors sought the assistance of a number of domestic and foreign agencies to authenticate the tapes. They finally based their conclusions primarily on reports from the Ministry of Justice Investigation Bureau and from a New York-based laboratory named OWL.
The OWL report says that "the tape ? is not authentic and should not be considered as reliable evidence." The prosecutors concluded that the tape was fabricated.
According to Article 92 of the Public Officials Election and Recall Law (公職人員選罷法) cited by prosecutors to indict Chen, Chen's alleged offense of slandering a candidate in an attempt to alter election results carries a penalty of imprisonment for up to five years.
Chen, however, insisted in a press conference yesterday that the tape was authentic. He said that the prosecutors' authentication was flawed and that he would ask the court to conduct further examinations.
Taiwan yesterday said it was looking forward to attending an upcoming memorial in Japan to mark the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, a day after the Japanese city said it had retracted its previous decision to not invite Taiwan to the event. The case has been dealt with by Taiwan’s representative office in Fukuoka and the Nagasaki City Government, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. The ministry would decide who to send to the Aug. 9 event once it receives the invitation, it added. The ministry made the remarks following a Japanese media report on Saturday that said Nagasaki Mayor
UNILATERAL: The move from China’s aviation authority comes despite a previous 2015 agreement that any changes to flight paths would be done by consensus The Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) yesterday slammed Beijing for arbitrarily opening the M503 flight route’s W121 connecting path, saying that such unilateral conduct disrespected the consensus between both sides and could destabilize the Taiwan Strait and the wider region. The condemnation came after the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) earlier yesterday announced it “has activated the W121 connecting path of the M503 flight route,” meaning that west-to-east flights are now permitted along the path. The newly activated west-to-east route is intended to “alleviate the pressure caused by the increase of flights,” China’s state-run Xinhua news agency quoted China’s Taiwan Affairs Office
LANDMARK: Taiwan and Haiti are set to mark the 70th anniversary of diplomatic relations next year, the president said, adding that the two would deepen bilateral ties President William Lai (賴清德) yesterday pledged continued support for Haiti, particularly in food aid and healthcare, as the Caribbean nation faces ongoing social and economic challenges. Speaking at a meeting with Haitian Minister of Foreign Affairs Jean-Victor Harvel Jean-Baptiste, Lai said Taiwan would step up bilateral cooperation to help improve Haiti’s social infrastructure. Taiwan would continue supporting Haiti through initiatives aimed at improving healthcare, food security and overall development, he said. Taiwan and Haiti are set to mark the 70th anniversary of diplomatic relations next year, the president said, adding that the two nations would continue to support each other and deepen bilateral
STRONG WINDS: Without the Central Mountain Range as a shield, people should be ready for high-speed winds, CWA weather forecaster Liu Yu-chi said Danas was yesterday upgraded to a typhoon and could grow stronger as it moves closely along the nation’s west coastline, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. Hsinchu and Chiayi cities, Taichung, Tainan and Kaohsiung, as well as Hsinchu, Miaoli, Changhua, Yunlin, Nantou, Chiayi, Penghu and Pingtung counties have canceled work and school today. Work and school in Keelung, Taipei, New Taipei City and Taoyuan, and Yilan, Taitung, Hualien, Kinmen and Lienchiang (Matsu) counties would continue as usual, although offices and schools would be closed in Taoyuan’s Luju (蘆竹), Dayuan (大園), Guangyin (觀音) and Sinwu (新屋) districts. As of 5pm yesterday, the typhoon’s