Sunday I marched in the DPP's march & rally "breaking the black box/protecting the rice bowls" to protest the arrival of PRC negotiator Chen Yunlin in our fair city of Taichung. We came early, before the crowd gathered here along a 1.5 kilometer stretch of Anhe Rd.
Tripods await news cameras.
A TV announcer warms up.
Preparing for the big broadcast.
Rally goers began arriving around 1:00 in buses from all over Taiwan.
The family is ready.
Rally-goers in uniform vests were a common sight.
An airhorn seller. Thankfully there did not seem to be many airhorns in our part of the crowd.
Although the sun came out for brief moments throughout the march, it was quite cold.
The DPP had plenty of its own volunteers doing traffic management and security.
Here a security volunteer receives instruction in the use of the lightsaber.
We ran into one of my wife's old classmates, now a DPP county councilman for Taipei county.
The crowd builds.
Taichung Mayor Jason Hu, a canny politician, laid on buses to move the protesters from the train station to the rally point. They were called "Love Democracy Buses" as the sign atop the bus says.
The old were a strong presence in the rally, with a leavening of families in their 40s with small children. There was hardly anyone under 35. The DPP rallies offer nothing to attract the young, so they don't come.
This cute father and son team was heavily photo'd.
Lots of home-made signs.
As the crowd stacked up, traffic become more and more difficult to manage. The police and the DPP volunteers did a great job.
This DPP politico lead the crowd cheers. Here she is giving out interviews.
Another contingent arrives.
The crowd continues to build.
Perhaps the most interesting vehicle was the photographers truck. It was dog-eat-dog up there.
Tossing oranges to the crowd.
Festooned with signs and banners and....a large crustacean, this truck drove by to cheers from the crowd.
The crowd stretched down both sides of Anhe Rd here for over a kilometer.
A number of prominent DPP politicians appeared. Here former Chairman Yu Shyi-kun arrives.
Frank Hsieh spoke as well.
Of course, Tsai Ing-wen had the last word.
A rally-goer.
The crowd waits to move.
A cameraman films the crowd as we walk up Anhe Rd.
Lin Cho-shui was there just standing by the side of the road.
On the move.
A large ROC was painted on a building near Chen Yunlin's route. Another equally gigantic sign announced "one China, one Taiwan."
Marching along Taichunggang Rd to chants of "One country on each side!"
The HSR roars overhead.
Security films the crowd.
I was never able to get above the crowd for a good shot, too many signs and things blocking the view.
It wasn't the only thing shivering.
Emerging into the city.
Construction cranes everywhere on this side of the city signal strong construction-industrial state support for the incumbent KMT mayor, Jason Hu.
The police were everywhere and did a fantastic job in traffic and crowd management.
The crowd approaches Liming Rd.
Moving in style.
Marching down Liming Rd.
As the marchers went down Liming, the crossing traffic cut up the crowd into chunks.
My family and I with my friend Drew, taken by Drew's wife, Joyce.
Crowd estimates: as we were walking and talking on the phone with people in the other line, there was much cynical commentary among us foreigners on how badly the international media would lowball the crowd size and how much credence it would give the always absurdly low police figures. Some estimates:
AFP: "
up to 30,000"
AP: t
he police said 20-30,000, and reported (fairly) "tens of thousands."
Reuters:
"Organizers said 100,000 people attended the march. Local police put the figure at 10,000." The report said "thousands" demonstrated. Reuters also said:
"Among the protesters were hardliners who want Taiwan to declare formal independence from China. Some waved banners advocating 'one side, one country.'"
This construction is ridiculous on every level. Apparently, in the international media, if you march peacefully waving a banner and declare that you support an independent and democratic Taiwan, you're a "hardliner." But if you point missiles at Taiwan, declare that everyone on the island must submit or die, and threaten to plunge the region into war if you don't get your way, you're.....a statesman? Hey Reuters, the President of China is a mass murderer. I guess if only he would wave banners and chant, people would really think he was a hardliner.
Not to mention the grossly incorrect formulation that Taiwan is declaring independence "from China." We're not part of China, and no internationally recognized treaty makes us part of China. There's a reason people read blogs, and errors like this are it.
The CNA, by contrast,
did an excellent job; the reporter who wrote this piece was actually there:
In the days leading up to Sunday's protest rally, the DPP said it hoped to mobilize 100,000 people, and the party estimated after the event that the turnout had surpassed its goal. The Taichung City government, on the other hand, put the turnout at 31,000.
Fears that clashes would break out never materialized. Taichung City government spokesperson Tsou Mei-liang earlier said that no confrontations took place Sunday, and it was not a surprise since "the protest was legally applied for and all arrangements had been implemented beforehand." Prior to the main rally, the protesters marched for more than two hours in Taichung's streets, and made the most noise when they walked past the Windsor Hotel, where Chen will stay during his five-day stay, to express their displeasure over the Chinese negotiator's visit.
The Taipei Times
also reported a police figure of 30,000. Good to know that the process ran peacefully, but with Chen Yunlin arriving later this morning, and local KMT councilman coyly asking the DPP not to get violent, I smell a set up.
What I believe is the correct figure is given in the
Taiwan News piece by longtime Taiwan journalist Dennis Engbarth, who was actually there:
Marchers in the first route, which was mobilized by the DPP, numbered over 40,000, according to former DPP secretary-general Lin Chia-lung, while the "Break the Black Box" route had over 30,000 participants.
DPP Spokesman Tsai Chi-chang stated that over 100,000 participated in the event, surpassing the party's target.
Dennis and I were in different lines, I would say about 60-70,000 for the whole march as well. 30,000 is ridiculous; there were more people than that in my line alone. The DPP figure of 100,000 is also too high. The mysterious 10,000 number in the Reuters piece is simply the kind of nonsense that makes you shake your head.
UPDATE: Found out that incredibly lowball figure was the first figure the police were giving out. That was later changed to 30,000.
This march had a different feel than the rallies I was in last year, much less electric, more mellow. As a friend noted, fewer airhorns, thankfully. Perhaps it was just the cold weather. Turnout was probably also depressed by Taichung's lack of convenient public transportation.
Taiwan News quoted the DPP's Lin Chia-lung, the likely challenger for the upgraded Taichung mayoralty next year:
Former DPP secretary-general Lin Chia-lung told The Taiwan News that the fact that the march attained its target "will exert pressure on the Chiang-Chen talks."
"Hu Jintao (PRC State Chairman) stated that the ECFA talks should be launched before the end of this year, but the size of this march in Taichung City, which is under KMT administration, and the strong showing of young people shows that many people in Taiwan identify its advocations."
"The march has sent a message to Hu that the CCP cannot simply strike a deal with Ma or the KMT and ignore the Taiwan people," said Lin, who added that "Ma now faces a combined pressure from the Taiwan electorate and the CCP."
Young people? What young people? I don't know about the other line, but there were few in mine.
ADDED: There were young people among the crowds lining the roads. I suspect if the DPP offered the right activities, consumption items, rituals, and gestures, the young might well turn out. It should also be noted, as a friend reminded me, that the turnout
along the road is important too.
CORRECTED: maddog writes:
The DPP rallies offer nothing to attract the young, so they don't come.
Kou Chou Ching (sp?) and Dog G performed at the rally. Did you miss it? I did miss it! Thanks man. That's good news.
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