The part of community that was due for demolition |
It took me a day to
recover from observing the forced eviction and demolition of the Huaguang
Community from Tuesday evening to late morning on Wednesday. Monitoring the fifty-hour standoff between
the community members, young protesters and the police was proven to be very
taxing, as I realized I am no longer in my twenties.
The Huaguang
Community is located on Hangzhou S. Road (杭州南路) and Jihua Road (金華路), next to the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial
Hall. The Ministry of Justice claimed
ownership to the property, and the majority of the residents of Huaguang were public
workers for the MOJ, civil servants and low-ranking Kuomintang (KMT) military personnel,
who fled to Taiwan after the Nationalist government was defeated in China in
1949. There are also residents who lived
in the community under the Japanese era. The community residents had been
living on the land for the several decades, paying property tax, commercial tax
and also electricity, water and gas bills.
Ministry of Justice
started evicting the residents and demolishing houses of the community in February. The demolition took place two days ago was
the fourth wave. The MOJ also filed
multimillion dollar lawsuits against the residents for illegally occupying and
illegally profiting from the land. The
MOJ won judgments against the residents and began freezing the residents’ bank
accounts, garnishing their wages and public assistance.
The Huaguang
Community is to be razed to make space for a government bid to create a district
that resembles the Tokyo Roppongi neighborhood.
How extremely
ironic the government decided to name the project “Taipei Roppongi (台北六本木) ”.
What the neighbors and local residents, who came to heckle the young
protesters and residents, didn’t realize, is during the Edo period, Tokugawa
insisted for the clan leaders of the six daimyo to come live in the area that
would later be called Roppongi, to move them away from their home turf and to
prevent them from revolting. As Roppongi
prospered, the feudal lords eventually sought expansion of the area and
forcibly took land from their neighbors.
As I told a woman in the process of screaming at the young protesters,
“You know, ma’am, what they’ll want next after they raised the glitzy buildings
on this plot will be the old apartment you’ve been living in for the past forty
years. You’re naïve to believe the
developers are going to stop right here”.
Today's Roppongi in Tokyo is a busy place. The place is filled with night clubs, hostess bars, cabarets strips bars and restaurants. However, it is also riddle with crime and known for the presence of yakuza members, both as patrons or business conductors. If the same phenomenon happens in Taiwan, I doubt those from the underworld would be as tolerant to heckling as the Huaguang residents.
Today's Roppongi in Tokyo is a busy place. The place is filled with night clubs, hostess bars, cabarets strips bars and restaurants. However, it is also riddle with crime and known for the presence of yakuza members, both as patrons or business conductors. If the same phenomenon happens in Taiwan, I doubt those from the underworld would be as tolerant to heckling as the Huaguang residents.
Police refusing entry to this journalist |
Since the residents
and young protesters put up a hell of a fight when the last demolition took
place, the Daan District Police came to the Community thirteen hours prior to demolition, to put up barricades and wired gates to block off the community from outsiders. There is an on-going dispute on the legality of the police action.
When I arrived at the community at around 7:30pm, there were police officers everywhere, asking for identification from any one who wanted to enter or approach the community and turning away those who they thought did not belong, including journalists with press passes. The supporters and the residents were planning a concert with food from restaurants from the community, but the police effectively ruined the “festivity”. As I walked around the community to survey the houses, I saw an old woman, who I later found out is a resident and worked as a street sweeper until three years ago, stood at the wired gate and told the police officer guarding the gate repeated that “they took NTD$2,000 from me every month, I cry every month”. She’d repeat that same sentence to the police officers every five minutes.
The concert and speeches from residents, human rights activists and academics continued until after 10:30pm, when the police would not allow a resident to take her usual route home as she came from work. Clash broke out as the protesters attempted and then successfully removed the wired gate, forcing the police to retreat to their second line.
Wednesday Morning
I went home to
sleep for a few hours, and then woke up at 4:45am to head back to the community
to watch the demolition and protest.
This time, J. Michael Cole, the Deputy News Chief of the Taipei Times
accompanied me. We were met with a much
larger police presence at both ends of the barricade. Mr. Cole was allowed into the restricted area
to interview and take photographs of the event, as I stayed outside and chatted
with the residents, the protesters, the police and passersby.
5:30am |
Another clash
occurred when the police tried to move excavators into the restricted
area. A few students were hurt, as the
police was extremely rough with them.
The students then sat on the ground, holding each other’s arms,
chanting, “Forced Demolition is Tyranny!
Government fine kills! (強拆暴政, 罰款殺人)”
I then moved to the
east barricade. I stood on the sideline
and spoke to a few very tired and tattered looking officers, as the students
distributed flowers amongst themselves. “I’ve
been here since 8pm last night, and I am still here…it’s the third hour of my
overtime!” an older police complained.
“You must be tired”, I said.
“Yeah well”, he said, “but I’ll tell ya, these are the highest quality
protesters I’ve seen, and I’ve been on the force for thirty years”. He continued, “I can tell these students are
so dedicated and good-natured. They are
good kids. I don’t really have the
hearts to be tough on them”. A CID officer
then said, “When I arrived, I took a quick look at the students, because I’m
afraid my daughter could be among them”.
Students with flowers in hand |
Later, as the
students clashed with the police at the east barricade, I saw the same senior
officer stood around, not really pushing back, as his other colleagues try to
prevent the students from approaching the demolition site. As he saw one young protester grabbing
another policeman’s shield, he reached around me and tapped the protester
lightly on her shoulder, distracting her and giving his colleague the time to
retract his shield.
The protest ended
late in the morning, as the protesters threw ghost money in the air to give to
the money-hungry businesses and politicians.
The two-day protest was over.
After thoughts
Some onlookers and
passersby yelled and heckled the protesters, especially the young ones. A few even tried to lecture them. An old mainlander, who claimed to be a
retired military officer, carrying a homemade bag with the phrase “Diaoyutai
Islands belong to us” taped to the bag, told the students to go home and study
and stop wasting their time. Another
woman with bags of grocery screamed at the protesters, “You people stand in the
way of Taiwan’s progress and modernity! All you people know is whine!” The third woman pointed at the students and
sneered, “Ignorant young people with too much time on their hands! Go do something
else if you are bored! These people are
freeloaders. They need to be kicked
out!” One angry neighbor, who has been
screaming at the protesters since the night before, exclaimed, “If it were up
to me, I’d set all of your houses on fire and see if you leave or not!”
Mr. Zhan moving his belongs out of his house |
To me, the young protesters were nothing but ignorant.
The students are not preventing society from progressing and
modernizing. On contrary, the students are
the ones who understand modernity and progress shouldn’t be narrowly defined as
erecting expensive high-rises, building posh shopping malls and paving wide
roads. Progress and modernity of a
democratic society like Taiwan also means recognizing an individual’s right to
preside and live, respect the opinion of the minority, taking care of the
weakest and neediest members of the society and lending compassion and humanity
while upholding the rule of law. To many
of the elderly mainlanders, Huaguang is the only home they know. They’ve never been married, have no children
and could never return to live in the country across the Strait and with the
estranged family members that they had to abandon because of war. The Huaguang eviction, demolition and protests were especially troubling to me (even when I've personally witnessed a number of different protests) because those who are being driven out of their homes without any assistance are the members of society who sincerely cannot help themselves. Even though some of the younger members of the community (by younger, I meant those who are in their late 50s and 60s) had jobs as mechanics, food vendors and cab drivers, they are living right on the poverty line that without any assistance, they will not be able to get back on their feet. The presence of students at the community
gave hope to the residents that they were not invisible or forgotten, if only
the rest of society and government could just do the same.
(All photos by the author).
(All photos by the author).
Tossing ghost money in the air |
After demolition |
Hecklers |
3 comments:
Great report and photos, thank you! I went there on April 29 and took some pics myself: https://plus.google.com/113416725833352788493/posts/92yEj5DERWe
The silence was almost eerie that day.
Thanks for the comment. The community is fairly quite for now, as the MOJ has temporary suspended demolition pending the city government's evaluation of the remains of the Taihoku Prison at the site.
Thanks for sharing! I agree with your last paragraph, and have seen over the months the slow transformation of those peaceful inhabitants into potential homeless people, and how angry they gradually became, this is really heart-breaking.
Do you know where to find information on what's going to happen next?
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