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Condemn The Ministry of Justice’s Hasty Executions

Condemn The Ministry of Justice’s Hasty Executions The Minster of Justice, Tseng Yung-Fu, signed the orders of the executions, killing the four death row inmates, Chang Chun-Hong, Chang,Wen-Wei, Hong Chen Yeow, and Ke Shi-Ming at a heat on April 30th. The families of them weren’t informed and were not able to meet the four people for the last time before they died. Without the confirmation with the Judicial Yuan and other consultations, the Ministry of Justice presumed to take the claims to the constitution interpretation as illegal. More, “administration according to law” doesn’t mean that the government could execute inhumanly…

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AI condemned the execution of four prisoners

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL Press Release30 April 2010 Taiwan carries out first executions in five years Amnesty International has condemned the execution of four prisoners by the Taiwanese authorities, the first since December 2005. Chang Chun-hung, Hung Chen-yao, Ko Shih-ming and Chang Wen-wei were executed in prisons in Taipei, Tainan and Taichun on the evening of 30 April. The executions come just two weeks after new Minister of Justice Tseng Yung-fu was reported as saying that his ultimate goal is the abolition of the death penalty. “These executions cast a dark shadow on the country’s human rights record, and blatantly contradict the…

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New data law offers no aid to Taiwan citizens

Groups decry revision of data actBy Loa Iok-sinTaipei Times, Thursday, Apr 29, 2010, Page 3 “We regret that the revised law, which has sparked many controversies, was not fully discussed by the public and was hastily passed.”— Taiwan Association for Human Rights The Taiwan Association for Human Rights (TAHR) and the Association of Taiwan Journalists (ATJ) yesterday expressed their regrets over the revision of the Personal Data Protection Act (個人資料保護法), saying the revision was passed too hastily and without a thorough public discussion. The legislature adopted an amendment to the Computer- Processed Personal Data Protection Act (電腦保護個人資料處理法) on Tuesday, changing…

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Open Letter to the Minister of Justice of Taiwan

Open letter to the Minister of Justice of Taiwan Mr. Tseng Yung-fu Paris-Taipei, 26 March 2010 Re: The death penalty in Taiwan Excellency, We are writing to you further to your statement of March 22, quoted in the Central News Agency, regarding the application of the death penalty in Taiwan. We welcome the fact that you ordered a review of the cases of the 44 prisoners on death row in Taiwan, which in practice provides more time for in-depth thinking about further steps. We also appreciate last year’s extremely important measures by the government of Taiwan towards the restriction of…

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Execution is illegal under ROC regulations

The original article was publised on Taipei Times March 22nd, 2010 By Liu Ching-yi 劉靜怡 Monday, Mar 22, 2010, Page 8Former minister of justice Wang Ching-feng’s (王清峰) statement that she would never authorize the execution of a prisoner on death row and her subsequent resignation caused quite a controversy. Suddenly, everyone seems to be an expert on capital punishment, while both Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) politicians have showen serious confusion over the issue. This shows that neither the government nor the opposition have been practising what they have been preaching for so many years.…

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Taiwan must not go back to death road

Taiwan must not go back to death roadTaiwan News, Page 92010-03-12 12:00 AM President Ma Ying-jeou has again displayed his lack of political leadership and courage by failing to stand up for Justice Minister Wang Ching-feng, a long time advocate of the abolishment of the death penalty, now that she has come under severe pressure for her firm stance not to implement death sentences. Wang is not the first justice minister to refuse to sign death sentence orders as the current string of four years in which no death sentence has been executed began in 2006 under the former Democratic…

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It’s a dilemma for all

It’s a dilemma for the Minister of Justice, and it’s a dilemma for allStatement / Taiwan Alliance to End the Death Penalty / March 12, 2010 ‘I never blamed those who claim their support for the death penalty in public. It’s a moral choice to stand for or against the death penalty and the choice belongs to one’s conscience. What bothers me is that, an intellectual, a self-proclaimed abolitionist is content to retain the death penalty, just because the public poll and opinion are for it.’ ~ A public letter to Minister of Justice of the France, Robert Badinter, 1977…

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Ministry of Justice seeks to ban death penalty

Ministry of Justice seeks to ban death penaltyPublication Date:02/02/2010 Taiwan’s government is working to remove the death penalty from the country’s statute books but there is no timetable for achieving this goal, according to Minister of Justice Wang Ching-feng Feb. 1. “Abolishing capital punishment is an MOJ policy,” Wang said, adding that this could only be accomplished after society-wide consensus has been reached. According to the MOJ, a 27-strong task force comprising scholars, legal experts and representatives of victims has been established to review the statute and a number of associated issues. Based on the group’s recommendations, the ministry will…

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Activists protest alleged racism

By Loa Iok-sinSTAFF REPORTER Thursday, Jan 14, 2010, Taipei Times, Page 2 Immigrant rights advocacy groups yesterday staged a demonstration outside the National Immigration Agency (NIA), calling on the agency to sanction a junior high school teacher for allegedly making a racist remark against a student whose mother is Indonesian. A junior high school student in Kaohsiung County’s Linyuan Township (林園) — born to a Taiwanese father and an Indonesian mother — said the teacher, Hung Yu-wen (洪裕文), last month asked if she was a “barbarian” and told her to go back to Indonesia and be a “savage” like her…

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Global outpouring of solidarity with Iran’s human rights defenders

Over one hundred independent human rights and civil society organizations from around the world have urged delegations to the United Nations to support a resolution in the General Assembly condemning human rights violations in the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI), and urging the IRI to abide by its international human rights obligations. “Human rights conditions in Iran have deteriorated dramatically since the General Assembly’s 2008 Resolution….It is incumbent upon the international community and a matter of the utmost moral urgency to emphasize to the government of Iran that common human rights standards must be upheld,” the groups stated in their…