Saturday, June 24, 2006
'Mr Clean' relishes digging the dirt on Chen
LAWRENCE CHUNG
Chiu Yi says he planned to quit politics after he and his wife divorced in March last year.
One man who must be wishing the Kuomintang legislator had not changed his mind at the last minute is Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian, who is now facing his biggest crisis and coming under mounting pressure to step down.
"I was very frustrated and disappointed with local politics after I divorced last year. When I was thinking of stepping down from the political stage, TVBS made me change my mind," said Mr Chiu, referring to the cable TV network known for the dirt it digs up on the government in its political talk shows. The 50-year-old economist said it was TVBS that suggested he focus on exposing the irregularities of top government authorities.
"This was how I started my career exposing corruption and irregularities," he said.
His exposure of alleged corruption involving senior officials, including a close presidential aide, in the multibillion-dollar Kaohsiung subway construction project last year seriously dented the
image of Mr Chen's government.
Earlier this year, Mr Chiu dug up alleged wrongdoing involving the president's son-in-law, Chao Chien-ming. The arrest of Dr Chao last month for alleged insider trading dealt a further blow to Mr Chen, who, when he ran for the presidency in late 1999, had vowed to stamp out corruption and privileges if elected. He said he would end what he said was more than five decades of "totally corrupt" KMT rule.
That promise was a key reason Mr Chen won the presidency in 2000, but it has also become his biggest political problem. The opposition is seeking support from ruling party lawmakers for a recall motion that could lead to Mr Chen's ousting.
Mr Chiu said he was proud of his efforts in making the island's leader face up to corruption allegations tied to his family. He said he would pursue his mission of attacking corruption and wrongdoing by the top authorities.
"Even if the KMT wins the presidential election in 2008, I will do the same," Mr Chiu said.
The father of three quit the People First Party, the second-largest opposition party in Taiwan, just after his divorce and joined the KMT.
He said the most important quality for a graft-buster was a spotless personal record.
"You must not have a record of wrongdoing, otherwise you will suffer a tragic death. I happen to be a person with a clean record, and this means a great deal to my graft-busting efforts," Mr Chiu said.
The legislator, who grew up in a poor market neighbourhood, said some fellow lawmakers, whom he declined to identify, who had wanted to expose the wrongdoing of certain officials had been seriously hurt when their allegations backfired.
"I have never hung out in any improper places after work. I return home to be with my family as soon as I finish work. I consider myself to be a man with great discipline. This is why I don't get hurt after digging up all the dirt of others," he said.
The legislator said he had faced tremendous pressure since shifting his focus to the exposure of graft.
"My phones are tapped and I have been followed everywhere [by government agents]. I have received countless death threats," he said.
Mr Chiu said he was careful to make sure his children were well protected because of fears that someone might seek to avenge his deeds by harming them.
But he was adamant that those fears would not stop him being a whistle-blower.
"Threats do not work. Some have offered big bucks to shut my mouth, but that does not work either," Mr Chiu said, adding he did not really care about money after giving all his wealth - NT$500 million ($119 million) - to his former wife.
Asked what it felt like to be called a graft-busting hero on the mainland, Mr Chiu, who received a PhD in economics from National Taiwan University and studied in a postgraduate programme at the prestigious Cornell University in the US, said Taiwan's press freedom had made it possible for him to make a difference.
"This has made it possible for me to do this, because the news media will report about what I have found out. But it would be difficult to do so in a society like the mainland where news freedoms are held in check," he said.
Mr Chiu was gagged last month when he attempted to speak on his graft-busting exploits at Peking University.
LOL. The paper never mentions that Chiu Yi divorced his wife and gave her his assets so that if successfully sued, he wouldn't lose a thing. It also never mentions that Chiu Yi was arrested for inciting a riot, that TVBS us a 100% Chinese-owned station that is anti-DPP and pro-KMT, and so on. Never a dull moment on the Good Ship Chiu Yi, as Jason at Wandering to Tamshui chronicles :
The Evidence: During the pan-Blue protests following their election upset, Chiu kept himself busy on election night by instigating pan-Blue rioters to ram a truck into the Kaohsiung District Court on March 20. Chiu defended himself against the charges, saying "The prosecutors decided to indict me before they had really talked to any witnesses. People who were there with me all knew that I didn't do whatever it was they said I did." Prosecutors, however, had evidence suggesting otherwise, including a video clearly showing Chiu's misbehavior, and charged him with violating the Parade and Assembly Law.
Chiu has made a name for himself by suing others for reportedly secretly filming him sex up his old lady, slamming the pan-blue alliance's legal team for its handling of the post-election lawsuits, suing DPP Chairman Yu Shyi-kun for defamation, and publicly fighting with ex-Premier Frank Hsieh over whether Hsieh had called First Lady Wu Shu-chen "an empress" over the phone. Most recently, Chiu has made headlines for ditching the PFP to return to the KMT (purportedly to buy win more votes in the year-end mayoral election), and just last night was arrested following an appearance on a popular talk show for failing to show up in court to face charges related to his performance on election night 2004.
In the spirit of balancing the bad with the good, let me direct you to this post by Foreigner in Formosa, always a good read, on possibility of the Blues getting Cold Feet.
A few weeks ago, the China Post suggested that the KMT could spend the next two years toppling premier after premier, cabinet after cabinet. The notion that the KMT could do this repeatedly and not eventually be punished by the voters seemed absurd to me. Fooling all the people all the time, and all of that.
So it came as a bit of a surprise when the China Post ran up the white flag on a cabinet non-confidence vote earlier this week:
Enjoy!
[Taiwan] [Chen Shui-bian] [Ma Ying-jeou] [DPP] [KMT] [PFP] [Chiu Yi]
We all know what a scum bag Chiu Yi is. That's why it's all the more frustrating that it had to be him to bring this scandal to light.
ReplyDeleteIsn't Chiu Yi the same name as the adviser to the king who is memorialized in the dragon-boat festival???!!!
ReplyDeleteharris:
ReplyDeletethat's Chu Yuan(屈原)you are mentioning, while Mr."Graft Buster Hero for the blues/Scum bags for the greens" is Chiu Yi(邱毅)
Graft buster? I guess so, but that's not why I called him a scumbag. If you read Michael's post again, you'll notice that he's been involved in a number of violent attacks and assaults on the police. I don't know why he's not in jail.
ReplyDeleteHe's a scumbag alright. Doing something that's OK doesn't make him any less scummy.
Michael,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the links.
Kenneth Choy
Michael said: "The paper never mentions that Chiu Yi divorced his wife and gave her his assets so that if successfully sued, he wouldn't lose a thing."
ReplyDeleteActually, the article did mention transferring his assets to his wife. It said that Chiu "did not care about money after giving all his wealth - NT$500 million - to his former wife."
What I wonder about is how does a guy who apparently just taught college economics and was a politician earned so much money?
Or is he as good an investor as another college professor/civil servant, Lien Chan, who is just a super investor!
Michael, you are a college professor, do you make that much money teaching? Maybe I should switch career and look for a teaching job in Taiwan!
Kenneth Choy