Kaohsiung Incident
The
Kaohsiung Incident (Chinese: 高雄事件), also known as the
Formosa Incident (
Chinese: 美麗島事件), was the result of pro-
democracy demonstrations that occurred in
Kaohsiung,
Taiwan,
Republic of China to commemorate
Human Rights Day on
December 10,
1979.
It erupted following the police raid of
Formosa Magazine, an illegal publication designed to support the end of
Kuomintang monopolization of power in Taiwan. The ROC
Government Information Office under the leadership of
James Soong hoped to
chill opposition voices through heavyhanded methods. The protest disintegrated into a brawl as protesters, police and undercover agents collided. Soong addressed the public in a speech condemning the protesters, labelling one of the leaders,
Shih Ming-teh(施明德), "King of Bandits."
The incident publicized the oppressive tactics of the government in ruling Taiwan and the trial of eight leaders of the protest allowed a team of lawyers to publicly question the practices of torture used by the KMT to extract confessions. Most defense attorneys and defendants were members of the Chinese Comparative Law Society (中國"較法學會), which is now the
Taiwan Law Society (台灣法學會).
One of the accused,
Lin Yi-hsiung(林義雄), was routinely tortured by police interrogators. Then, on February 28, 1980, while Lin's wife was discussing his case, Lin's mother and twin 7 year old girls were murdered in his home. The event, known as the "Lin Family Murders," remains unsolved.
Several of the accused later became politicians after completion of their prison terms, while members of the defense team became leaders of the
Tangwai (Outside Party) movement and later the
Democratic Progressive Party. Members of the defense team included
Chen Shui-bian(陳水扁)(
President of the ROC),
Su Tseng-chang(蘇貞昌) (
Premier of the Republic of China) and
Frank Hsieh(謝長廷) (
Former Premier of the Republic of China). Those amongst the accused were
Annette Lu(呂秀")(Vice President of the ROC),
Shi Ming-teh(施明德) (Political Leader), and Lin Yi-hsiung (林義雄)(environmental activist and former DPP chairman).
Ironically and as a sign of how much politics in Taiwan has changed, Shi Ming-teh was seriously considered to be the KMT nominee for mayor of Kaohsiung in 2002. Another important leader during the incident,
Hsu Hsin-liang(許信良), left the DPP in 2000 and ran for
presidential election as an independent candidate. Both of them have been very critical of Chen Shui-bian's government. In a sign of how things have not changed, James Soong, who split with the KMT to form the similarly aligned PFP party, was a presidential candidate in 2000 and a vice-presidential candidate in 2004, in both cases on the losing side by only a small margin.
In English, the term
Kaohsiung Incident[
1] is used more often than
Formosa Incident[
2], while in Chinese, the term
美麗島事件[
3] (
Formosa Incident) receives priority[
4] over
高雄事件[
5] (
Kaohsiung Incident)
See also:
*
Propaganda in the Republic of China