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Thousands rally in Taiwan against nuclear plant

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Alfrescian
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Thousands rally in Taiwan against nuclear plant


AFP
April 27, 2014, 2:41 am

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Taipei (AFP) - Thousands of protesters staged a sit-in near the presidential palace in Taiwan's capital on Saturday to oppose a controversial nuclear power plant and show support for a high-profile activist on hunger strike.

The protesters braved pouring rain in Taipei to wave banners and placards reading "No nukes, no fear" and "Abolish nuclear power," amid tight security.

Police sealed off some streets in the area with barbed-wire barricades as organisers vowed to stage more protests if their demands were not met.

The plant outside Taipei has been one of the most contentious projects in Taiwan. Intense political wrangling has repeatedly delayed its construction, which began in 1999 and has already cost around Tw$300 billion ($10 billion).

Lin Yi-hsiung, a respected 72-year-old former opposition leader who has devoted himself to the anti-nuclear cause in the past two decades, began an indefinite hunger strike on Tuesday to urge the government scrap the nearly completed facility.

Lin has said that he was forced into taking the drastic move because the authorities ignored majority public opinion against the power station.

"The matter is urgent as Mr. Lin has been on hunger strike for five days," said protest organiser Liu Hui-min.

"We demand the government to stop building the plant immediately or we will continue the sit-in indefinitely."

Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou on Friday promised to let the public decide the fate of the facility in a referendum, but gave no timetable for the vote.

Concerns about Taiwan's nuclear facilities have been mounting since 2011, when the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan was hit by a tsunami which knocked out power to its cooling systems and sent reactors into meltdown.

Like Japan, Taiwan is regularly hit by earthquakes. In September 1999 a 7.6-magnitude quake killed around 2,400 people in the deadliest natural disaster in recent history.

"The government keeps telling us nuclear energy is safe because developed Western countries are using it but they are not prone to earthquakes like Taiwan. The government should not risk our lives," said school teacher Tsai Ya-ru.

The main opposition Democratic Progressive Party opposes the facility on safety grounds, while the ruling Kuomintang party says the island will run short of power unless it goes ahead. Taiwan's three existing nuclear power plants supply about 20 percent of the nation's electricity.

Some protesters urged the government to put the issue to a vote as soon as possible.

"I think many people don't trust the government now so it's better to let the public make the decision and we will obey majority opinion," said pharmacist Lee Chun-yi.

Organisers expected a turnout of over 70,000 people for the round-the-clock sit-in, which will be followed by a march on Sunday. An initial police estimate of the crowd size was 8,500.

 

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Thousands rally in Taipei against controversial nuclear plant project

PUBLISHED : Sunday, 27 April, 2014, 6:39am
UPDATED : Sunday, 27 April, 2014, 9:00am

Lawrence Chung in Taipei [email protected]

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A boy takes part in the anti-nuclear sit-in outside Ma Ying-jeou's office yesterday. Photo: Reuters

Thousands of anti-nuclear activists staged a sit-in in front of Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou's office yesterday, in a two-day protest demanding that the government drop a controversial nuclear power plant project that has been hotly debated on the island for decades.

Wearing yellow headbands bearing anti-nuclear slogans, the crowd of activists held position outside the president's office despite heavy rain.

"If the government does not want to take responsibility for stopping the plant project, then it should relax the requirements for a referendum," a protest organiser said. Under current rules, half of all eligible voters must take part in the referendum and half of those who do must approve of the proposal for the project to go ahead.

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Masses of demonstrators hold up anti-nuclear banners in the protest that is set to continue today. Photo: CNA

The NT$283 billion (HK$72.2 billion) project, proposed by the Taiwan Power Company in 1980, has triggered waves of protests over the years.

Construction for the project began in 2009 and commercial start-up of the plant, now 98 per cent completed, was scheduled for 2016. But the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan ignited new protests, forcing Ma's government to agree to safety checks.

Ma made further concessions in a meeting with opposition Democratic Progressive Party head Su Tseng-chang on Friday, agreeing to delay starting up the plant pending a referendum.

But the anti-nuclear activists put little faith in the president's promise to resolve the matter.

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Anti-nuclear protesters display a placard during an anti-nuclear demonstration in Taipei. Photo: AFP

"Without lowering the threshold for the referendum, there is no way the issue can be resolved," said Lin Fei-fan, a student leader of the Sunflower movement, an earlier protest against a trade services pact with the mainland, who was at the anti-nuclear demonstration.

Lin, who led the occupation of parliament to force Ma to withdraw the trade pact, said the president must take into account former DPP chairman Lin Yi-hsiung's opposition to the nuclear project.

The latter, a seasoned politician known for his anti-nuclear stance, began a hunger strike on Tuesday.

The mass protest was set to continue today with organisers planning a march down major avenues in Taipei that will end in front of Ma's office.

Other sit-ins and marches were staged in southern and northern Taiwan yesterday in support of the protest in Taipei.

 
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