One year later, farmers retake the streets against Land Expropriation Act

From "Taiwan Church News" <enews@pctpress.org>
Date Mon, 25 Jul 2011 14:47:02 +0800

3099 Edition
July 18-24, 2011

Headline News

One year later, farmers retake the streets against Land Expropriation Act

Reported by Chiou Kuo-rong

Written by Lydia Ma

One year ago, thousands of farmers and farmers’ rights activists staged an 
overnight rally against the Land Expropriation Act on Ketagalan Boulevard. But 
in view of this past year’s sluggish pace in revising this act despite promises 
to do so promptly, and farmlands in Taipei, Taoyuan, Miaoli, Hsinchu, and 
Changhua areas being continually appropriated, and Taiwan’s own declining food 
self-sufficiency, farmers staged another overnight rally in front of the 
Presidential Palace on July 16th, 2011.  

According to proposed revisions to this act submitted to the Executive Yuan by 
the Ministry of the Interior, local governments or developers applying for 
expropriation must clarify the public interests and necessities involved in the 
development project to a review commission.

In addition, all stakeholders — including residents in the planned 
expropriation area — must be invited to speak at public hearings before an 
expropriation application can be approved.

But according to reports from demonstrators, in the time that farmers wait for 
these revisions to finally become law, processes to expropriate lands are still 
in motion, a tell-tale sign that the Ma administration’s vows to reform this 
law cannot be trusted. 

Some scholars have speculated whether these land expropriations designed to 
pave the way for industrial parks are ultimately intended to fill national and 
local treasury coffers and deficits. 

Among those who attended this rally were many PCT pastors and members, as well 
as youth leaders from India and South Korea participating in this year’s “Youth 
Conference of the National Fate of Taiwan”. This year’s theme for the youth 
conference, “Practice the justice of God in the diverse but isolated Taiwan”, 
seemed eerily appropriate for the occasion.

PCT General Assembly Vice-Moderator, Rev. Pusin Tali, was present at the rally. 
He underscored that the role of churches was to understand the plight of 
farmers and help them succeed in life. PCT’s vision has always been to reach 
out to those who are marginalized and suffering and treasure them as God would.

Pusin Tali remarked that Taiwan’s Veterans Affairs Commission, an office that 
takes care of retired soldiers who came to Taiwan with KMT in 1949, hands out 
100 times more in financial aid to these soldiers than what Taiwanese farmers 
receive. This disparity was another tell-tale sign that the government had 
neither the desire to promote inter-ethnic relations in Taiwan nor the interest 
to treat farmers fairly.



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