Wild Strawberries Movement
The Wild Strawberries Movement is a protest movement in Taiwan begun on 6 November 2008 after the visit of the People's Republic of China's Association for Relations Across the [Taiwan Straits|ARATS] chairman Chen Yunlin to the island. Police actions on protests aimed at Chen suppressed the display of Republic of China national flag and the playing of Taiwanese songs. This prompted a group of 400 students in Taipei, Taiwan to begin a sit-in in front of the Executive Yuan in protest of Taiwan's.
Background
The name chosen by the students for their initiative, "Wild Strawberry", makes a pair of references. The word wild recalls the Wild Lily student movement of 1990, which led to vast political reforms and Taiwan's 1996 [Republic of China presidential election|first general democratic elections]. The word strawberry makes ironic use of the term "strawberry generation", a description of Taiwan's youth employed pejoratively by their elders to portray the newest generation as "soft", lacking strength of character and political convictions.Demonstrations
Sit-ins began with students in Taipei in front of the Executive Yuan. On 7 November 2008, police began removing protesters from the scene and taking them to separate locations around the city. Having made a regrouping plan earlier, the students reconvened at Liberty Square in front of the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall.Following the lead of the students in Taipei, six other sit-in protests sprang up around Taiwan:
- Kaohsiung, November 7
- Tainan, November 7
- Taichung, November 9
- Changhua, November 9
- Hsinchu, November 10
- Chiayi, November 12
Student demands and government responses
The student-led sit-in protests were conducted in response to incidents of police violence and abuse of power during the visit of Chen Yunlin to Taiwan. The original protesters in Taipei issued a statement with the following demands:- A public apology by President Ma Ying-jeou and Premier Liu Chao-shiuan for police misconduct.
- The immediate resignations of National Police Agency Director-General and National Security Bureau Director-General.
- An immediate review and amendment of the Assembly and Parade Law to ensure the right of peaceful assembly and expression.
- On 11 November 2008, Premier Liu made a statement to the Liberty Times as saying, "I will not apologize. With this kind of thing, you just wait one or two days and it will pass."
- President Ma Ying-jeou addressed the students on 13 November 2008, saying that, while he believed there was room for improvement in Wang Cho-chiun and Tsai Chao-ming's handling of public assembly issues, he saw no reason for them to step down.
- On 11 December 2008, Wild Strawberry and Tibetan demonstrators at Liberty Square were forced by police to leave the site for failure to comply with the existing Assembly and Parade Law.
- On 24 December 2008, an amended version of the Assembly and Parade Act passed its initial review at the legislature's Internal Administration Committee.