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Taiwan MPs stun students with mock college attack
19 Apr 2007 06:57:11 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Ralph Jennings

TAIPEI, April 19 (Reuters) - Two Taiwan legislators stunned students and drew sharp criticism for staging a mock attack on the island's top university to test its response after the deadly shootings on a U.S. college campus in Virginia.

Lee Chen-nan and Lin Kuo-ching, both lawmakers of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party, on Wednesday entered a building where students were taking exams and faked an attack to see how police would react, said National Taiwan University campus spokesman Fu Li-chen.

Campus police quickly called for back-up, drawing more than 50 officers to the scene, local media reported.

Fu said students were annoyed by the stunt, which followed Monday's shooting spree by a student at Virginia Tech university who killed 32 people.

An assistant to one of the lawmakers, Wu Hou-yi, said: "We saw that incident in the United States and were afraid someone here would try to imitate it".

He said only 12 police officers showed up at the campus after the incident, which several local journalists had gone along to witness.

"This was the legislators' and media's expression of concern, done with good intentions to remind us of how to do our work," spokesman Fu said. "This action we can accept because it follows a major event, but if it happens again, we'll have questions."

Taiwan's lawmakers often push the limits, routinely shouting at one another, brawling or bringing live animals into legislative sessions to make points.

An attack such as the Virginia Tech massacre would be more difficult to stage in Taiwan, where guns are tightly controlled and ownership of guns is illegal for the vast majority of people.

Taiwan's cabinet condemned the mock attack, saying the lawmakers and others involved had broken laws, and ordered an investigation.

Lee, one of the pair, rejected the criticism. "A lot of students were supportive, so what do I have to apologise for?" he told a news conference. "Why can't a legislator express himself like that? Don't we have this kind of freedom?"
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A protester holds the Chinese national flag as he walks outside Japan's embassy in Beijing June 18, 2007. A small group of Chinese, chanting "Lee Teng-hui is a traitor to the Chinese nation" and denouncing the former Taiwan president as a dog, held a brief protest at Japan's embassy in Beijing on Monday. The protesters -- outnumbered by police and reporters -- denounced Tokyo for letting the pro-Taiwan independence Lee visit recently, and demanded the release of a Chinese man arrested for throwing a bottle at the politician as he was heading home. The characters on his shirt reads: "Japan, get out of Diaoyu Islands".



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