The Ministry of the Interior should overrule the firing of a male police officer with long hair and comprehensively review grooming regulations to bring them in line with the Act of Gender Equality in Employment (性別工作平等法), labor and human rights groups said yesterday.
At a protest outside the Ministry of the Interior building, 20 people from the Taiwan Police Trade Union, Taiwan Tongzhi Hotline Association, Taipei City Confederation of Trade Unions and other groups said that the disciplining of Yeh Chi-yuan (葉繼元) should be reversed, demanding a response from Minister of the Interior Yeh Jiunn-rong (葉俊榮).
Yeh Chi-yuan — who serves in the National Police Agencies Second Special Police Corps responsible for guarding one of the nation’s nuclear plants — is in final stages of appealing his dismissal after accumulating 58 warnings over three years for refusing to cut his hair in accordance with police grooming rules.
Photo: CNA
Yeh Jiunn-rong was known for boasting shoulder length locks during his time as a professor of law at National Taiwan University before cutting his hair short immediately prior to taking office.
“The police force lacks gender awareness and constructs police officers’ identities to be strong and masculine, with no room for showing even the slightest weakness,” Yeh Chi-yuan said, adding that the National Police Agency imposes different grooming standards for men and women.
“If you can say that something does not violate gender equality because there are rules for both men and women, then you justify requiring male and female police officers to give out different numbers of traffic tickets each month — there is a rule for both men and women after all,” he said, adding that long hair would not interfere with job performance.
“Hair is a part of the body and everyone should have the right to preserve the completeness of their body,” he said. “My gender identity is not very masculine, so it is painful for me to be forced to conform to a constructed male identity.”
Taiwan Association of Human Rights vice secretary-general Shih Yi-hsiang (施逸翔) said the disparate grooming rules are an example of how the nation has failed to fully implement the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which were ratified and given force of domestic law by the Legislative Yuan in 2009.
“This is an extremely low-level rule, but the National Police Administration did not complete a thorough review when it examined what rules might violate the treaties,” Shih said.
Yeh Chi-yuan said activists plan an administrative court appeal after his dismissal is finalized.
He said that the group rejected a government representative sent to receive their demands after learning that he was from the National Police Agency, not the Ministry of the Interior.
The Central Weather Administration (CWA) today issued a sea warning for Typhoon Fung-wong effective from 5:30pm, while local governments canceled school and work for tomorrow. A land warning is expected to be issued tomorrow morning before it is expected to make landfall on Wednesday, the agency said. Taoyuan, and well as Yilan, Hualien and Penghu counties canceled work and school for tomorrow, as well as mountainous district of Taipei and New Taipei City. For updated information on closures, please visit the Directorate-General of Personnel Administration Web site. As of 5pm today, Fung-wong was about 490km south-southwest of Oluanpi (鵝鑾鼻), Taiwan's southernmost point.
Almost a quarter of volunteer soldiers who signed up from 2021 to last year have sought early discharge, the Legislative Yuan’s Budget Center said in a report. The report said that 12,884 of 52,674 people who volunteered in the period had sought an early exit from the military, returning NT$895.96 million (US$28.86 million) to the government. In 2021, there was a 105.34 percent rise in the volunteer recruitment rate, but the number has steadily declined since then, missing recruitment targets, the Chinese-language United Daily News said, citing the report. In 2021, only 521 volunteers dropped out of the military, the report said, citing
A magnitude 5.3 earthquake struck Kaohsiung at 1pm today, the Central Weather Administration said. The epicenter was in Jiasian District (甲仙), 72.1km north-northeast of Kaohsiung City Hall, at a depth of 7.8km, agency data showed. There were no immediate reports of damage. The earthquake's intensity, which gauges the actual effects of a temblor, was highest in Kaohsiung and Tainan, where it measured a 4 on Taiwan's seven-tier intensity scale. It also measured a 3 in parts of Chiayi City, as well as Pingtung, Yunlin and Hualien counties, data showed.
Nearly 5 million people have signed up to receive the government’s NT$10,000 (US$322) universal cash handout since registration opened on Wednesday last week, with deposits expected to begin tomorrow, the Ministry of Finance said yesterday. After a staggered sign-up last week — based on the final digit of the applicant’s national ID or Alien Resident Certificate number — online registration is open to all eligible Taiwanese nationals, foreign permanent residents and spouses of Taiwanese nationals. Banks are expected to start issuing deposits from 6pm today, the ministry said. Those who completed registration by yesterday are expected to receive their NT$10,000 tomorrow, National Treasury