Taiwan will tear down all remaining statues of Chiang Kai-shek in public spaces

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Taiwan‘s government will remove all remaining statues of late president Chiang Kai-shek from public spaces in what is seen as a bid to erase his legacy and the historical link with mainland China.

Chiang ruled the island for nearly three decades until his death in 1975. He had led his Nationalist or Kuomintang troops to Taiwan in 1949 and set up an interim government on the island, declaring martial law, after being defeated in a civil war by the Communists on the mainland.

Taiwan’s independence-leaning Democratic Progressive Party government set up a transitional justice commission in 2018 to investigate Chiang’s rule, finding perceived political dissidents had been persecuted and he had misused government funds to benefit the KMT.

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Future of Chiang Kai-shek statues questioned as Taiwan reckons with former leader’s legacy

Future of Chiang Kai-shek statues questioned as Taiwan reckons with former leader’s legacy

One of the commission’s proposals was to remove thousands of Chiang statues across Taiwan. Critics have branded Chiang as a dictator who sent troops to kill hundreds of civilians during unrest in 1947 and say he does not deserve to be remembered.

On Monday, a cabinet official told the legislature that the interior ministry would swiftly remove the more than 760 statues of Chiang that are still standing across the island.

The ministry would coordinate with local and central governments to remove them, said Shih Pu, deputy director general of the Department of Human Rights and Transitional Justice under the cabinet.

“The interior ministry has communicated and coordinated with relevant departments over [the removal] and has provided subsidies as an incentive for them to do so,” he said.

Shih was responding to a call from DPP lawmaker Huang Jie to speed up the process.

Huang said the government had offered subsidies worth NT$100,000 (about US$3,000) to relevant units to remove the statues, but only 165 of the 934 listed statues had been pulled down. She asked what the hold-up was.

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Shih said the military was part of the problem. “The defense ministry has said it needs to take into account the military tradition,” he said, referring to Chiang being honored as the founder of the island’s military academy.

Chiang was superintendent of the Whampoa Military Academy in Guangdong province in 1924, and went on to re-establish it in Taiwan in 1950.

Last week, Defense Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng said it was military tradition to honor Chiang and any statues of him on the island’s military bases were deemed to be on private property.

Chiang Kai-shek (centre), with his wife Soong May-ling and his son Chiang Wei-kuo (right) pictured in Taipei in 1961. Photo: AFP

Huang Kwei-bo, a professor of diplomacy at National Chengchi University in Taipei, said the DPP government appeared to be trying to hasten its “de-Sinicisation” efforts.

“Before any public discussion or debate on social justice, and before any court determination of violating so-called transitional justice, the unilateral handling of a former leader who contributed to the defense of Taiwan and its outlying islands by the [DPP] authorities are unreasonable,” he said.

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