Latin America

Taiwan’s speaker expelled as political scandal deepens

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Wang Jin-pyng is accused of influencing prosecutors not to appeal in a breach of trust case involving a legislator

EXPELLED. Taiwan's Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng was expelled from Parliament September 11, 2013. Here, speaks at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport on September 10, 2013. AFP

TAIPEI, Taiwan – Taiwan’s ruling party expelled the parliamentary speaker Wednesday, September 11, after he was accused of meddling in a lawmaker’s court case, deepening a political scandal that has rocked the island.

President Ma Ying-jeou, chairman of the the Kuomintang (KMT) party, said Wang Jin-pyng was “unfit” to head the legislature after he was accused of influencing prosecutors not to appeal in a breach of trust case involving lawmaker Ker Chien-ming.

Wang was suspected of asking then-justice minister Tseng Yung-fu and a top prosecutor not to appeal last year’s acquittal of Ker. Tseng resigned on Friday, September 6, over the case.

The ruling party said Wednesday that Wang’s membership has been revoked for “damaging the party’s reputation”, rendering him unable to continue as speaker.

A KMT spokesman said Wang could appeal the party’s decision.

Wang, 72, was a KMT heavyweight known for his grass-roots influence, and his removal has sent shockwaves through the island’s political circles. He had been one of Taiwan’s longest-serving speakers, holding the position since 1999.

“I hoped Wang would have voluntarily resigned to maintain the last shred of dignity for the parliament and the KMT,” Ma told reporters Wednesday.

The claims against Wang were uncovered by investigators wiretapping Ker’s mobile phone.

And Wang told reporters late Tuesday that this was an “illegal investigation”.

“I do not accept that prosecutors have unilaterally charged me with influence-peddling following an illegal investigation,” he said.

Tseng, who has also denied wrongdoing, was the third minister in the Ma government to step down in recent months.

In late July, defense minister Kao Hua-chu resigned following public anger over the death of a young conscript, who was allegedly abused in the military. His successor, Andrew Yang, quit just six days after taking office over plagiarism allegations.

Taiwan’s judicial system has been criticized in recent years after a corruption scandal implicating top judges as well as a spate of controversial rulings involving child sexual assault cases. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!