Keelung Mayor George Hsieh (謝國樑) today apologized over a former Keelung Civil Affairs Department director's illegal accessing of citizen data to assist in recall petitions against local councilors from the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).
Hsieh, a member of the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT), bowed deeply to DPP Keelung City Councilor Cheng Wen-ting (鄭文婷) during a city council hearing and also apologized to the entire council and Keelung residents for Chang Yuan-hsiang's (張淵翔) abuse of power under his leadership.
Photo courtesy of the Keelung City Council
The bow may have seemed belated, Hsieh said, adding that he had been "surprised and saddened" to learn of Chang's alleged actions and was waiting for the results of the investigation to determine whether other officials were involved.
The case came to light last month as part of prosecutors' investigation into forgery in recall campaigns across the country, after the Central Election Commission found petitions bearing the names of deceased people.
These campaigns included petitions targeting DPP Keelung City Councilors Cheng and Jiho Tiun (張之豪).
Under recall law, campaigners must submit petitions signed by constituents in a particular district to initiate a recall against representatives in that district.
Following raids and questioning, Keelung prosecutors suspected Chang of illegally accessing Taiwan's household registration system to help revise and verify a KMT party membership list in the city, and they requested court approval to detain him on April 29.
Chang, who confessed to prosecutors to accessing the system, stepped down from his post, making him one of the first public servants to resign over involvement in the recall campaign.
On May 6, the district court also approved detaining Chang and holding him incommunicado.
Meanwhile, two officials at Keelung's Zhongzheng Household Registration Office were also interrogated and released on bail for allegedly breaching the Personal Data Protection Act (個人資料保護法).
Today, Hsieh said the two officials were also expected to resign.
Cheng accepted Hsieh's apology, calling it "the foundation of a responsible government."
Local citizens would be glad to see Hsieh finally apologize, she said.
Beijing could eventually see a full amphibious invasion of Taiwan as the only "prudent" way to bring about unification, the US Department of Defense said in a newly released annual report to Congress. The Pentagon's "Annual Report to Congress: Military and Security Developments Involving the People's Republic of China 2025," was in many ways similar to last year’s report but reorganized the analysis of the options China has to take over Taiwan. Generally, according to the report, Chinese leaders view the People's Liberation Army's (PLA) capabilities for a Taiwan campaign as improving, but they remain uncertain about its readiness to successfully seize
Taiwan is getting a day off on Christmas for the first time in 25 years. The change comes after opposition parties passed a law earlier this year to add or restore five public holidays, including Constitution Day, which falls on today, Dec. 25. The day marks the 1947 adoption of the constitution of the Republic of China, as the government in Taipei is formally known. Back then the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) governed China from Nanjing. When the KMT, now an opposition party in Taiwan, passed the legislation on holidays, it said that they would help “commemorate the history of national development.” That
Trips for more than 100,000 international and domestic air travelers could be disrupted as China launches a military exercise around Taiwan today, Taiwan’s Civil Aviation Administration (CAA) said yesterday. The exercise could affect nearly 900 flights scheduled to enter the Taipei Flight Information Region (FIR) during the exercise window, it added. A notice issued by the Chinese Civil Aviation Administration showed there would be seven temporary zones around the Taiwan Strait which would be used for live-fire exercises, lasting from 8am to 6pm today. All aircraft are prohibited from entering during exercise, it says. Taipei FIR has 14 international air routes and
Snow fell on Yushan (Jade Mountain, 玉山) yesterday morning as a continental cold air mass sent temperatures below freezing on Taiwan’s tallest peak, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. Snowflakes were seen on Yushan’s north peak from 6:28am to 6:38am, but they did not fully cover the ground and no accumulation was recorded, the CWA said. As of 7:42am, the lowest temperature recorded across Taiwan was minus-5.5°C at Yushan’s Fengkou observatory and minus-4.7°C at the Yushan observatory, CWA data showed. On Hehuanshan (合歡山) in Nantou County, a low of 1.3°C was recorded at 6:39pm, when ice pellets fell at Songsyue Lodge (松雪樓), a