Indigenous groups furious at President Ma’s denial of Aboriginal Basic Act

From "Taiwan Church News" <enews@pctpress.org>
Date Mon, 2 Jan 2012 10:50:18 +0800

3122 Edition

December 26, 2011-January 1, 2012

Headline News

Indigenous groups furious at President Ma’s denial of Aboriginal Basic Act

Reported by Chiou Kuo-rong

Written by Lydia Ma

Members of an alliance created to safeguard the rights of indigenous peoples 
during the 2012 election visited Legislative Yuan President Wang Jin-pyng at 
his office on the morning of December 21, 2011 to ask his opinion about a 
statement President Ma had made the previous day concerning the Aboriginal 
Basic Act.

According to reports, President Ma had said that many clauses within the 
Aboriginal Basic Act were unfeasible and impossible to regulate into law. His 
denial irked members of this alliance, consisting of indigenous rights 
advocates, so much that they responded by asking the President to apologize.

According to this alliance, the Aboriginal Basic Act was passed in 2005 and is 
now a national law and a guiding set of principles for all laws pertaining to 
indigenous peoples. That President Ma, the head-of-state of Taiwan, would now 
publicly deny the feasibility of this law is an affront to the credibility and 
dignity of both the national legislature and the law, which is no small matter. 

On that day, members of this organization also brought before Wang Jin-pyng 
issues such as the storage of nuclear wastes on land belonging to indigenous 
peoples and the realization of the Aboriginal Basic Act. They hoped that Wang 
would uphold the dignity of the Legislative Yuan by exerting some pressure on 
Ma.

“Indigenous peoples are on the brink of death,” said Rev. Omi Wilang, PCT 
Indigenous Committee Secretary and convener of this organization. He explained 
that examples of indigenous peoples losing their living space in recent years 
abound in Taiwan, yet indigenous issues were not addressed at all during the 
televised presidential debates. To now hear the President claim that the 
Indigenous Basic Law is not feasible is nothing short of adding insult to 
injury.

“Who has the final say? The President or the law passed and endorsed by the 
Legislative Yuan?” asked Omi Wilang rhetorically. He reiterated that it has 
been many years since the Aboriginal Basic Act was written into law and 
regulations derived from this act should have been put forth long ago. However, 
the Ma administration has been ignoring the need to table and pass such 
regulations.

Omi Wilang underscored that the alliance would continue to confront President 
Ma on this issue every day until polling day unless the President clarified his 
previous statement and issued a clear response regarding the rights of 
indigenous peoples.

 

********************

Taiwan Church News is published weekly in Taiwan's local languages. 

You may translate and re-use our articles online only if you acknowledge the 
source as "Taiwan Church News" and list the names of the reporter and writer. 
Contact us before reprinting any of our articles for print publications. 

Direct comments and questions about this article to: enews@pctpress.org

Visit our website for more news at: http://enews.pctpress.org/ (English) or 
http://www.tcnn.org (Chinese) 

********************