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| Hollander |
Posted: Nov 9 2007, 05:02 AM
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Friend of Ours ![]() Group: Friend of Ours Posts: 5,258 Member No.: 4 Joined: 3-April 06 |
Gangsters bid farewell to Taipei boss
Friday, November 09, 2007 Mourners from Hong Kong were among thousands of people who bid farewell to Taiwanese gang leader Chen Chi-li amid heavy police surveillance of the funeral in Taipei. About 3,000 mourners - reportedly including gang members from Hong Kong and Japan - queued to get into a makeshift shrine to pay their last respects. Chen, who turned the Bamboo Union into one of Taiwan's largest gangs, died of pancreatic cancer in Hong Kong on October 4. He was 64. Chen, wanted in Taiwan, had lived in self-imposed exile in Cambodia since 1996. He was hospitalized in August. He is probably best known for his involvement in the October 1984 execution of an alleged triple-intelligence agent in the United States. Chen and several fellow gang members flew to San Francisco and gunned down Liu Yi-liang, better known as Jiang Nan, at his home. Chen was arrested in Taiwan one month later and during his trial, said the murder was ordered by a Taiwanese intelligence unit chief who claimed Liu spied for Taiwan, China and the United States. He was sentenced to life in prison but released on parole in 1991. AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE |
| Hollander |
Posted: Nov 9 2007, 05:11 AM
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Friend of Ours ![]() Group: Friend of Ours Posts: 5,258 Member No.: 4 Joined: 3-April 06 |
Police monitor gangster's funeral CLOSELY WATCHED: After a heckler disrupted him, President Chen Shui-bian said that his administration would never train people like the former gang leader to kill dissidents By Ko Shu-ling and Jimmy Chuang STAFF REPORTERS Friday, Nov 09, 2007, Page 2 ![]() Thousands of mourners attend the funeral of crime figure Chen Chi-li in Taipei yesterday. Chen, who turned the Bamboo Union into one of Taiwan's largest gangs, died of pancreatic cancer in Hong Kong on Oct. 4. Taiwanese police were on high alert as gangsters from Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan were expected to show up for Chen's funeral. PHOTO: AFP Police yesterday carried out heavy surveillance at Chen Chi-li's (陳啟禮) funeral service in Dazhi (大直) where hundreds of gang members showed up to bid farewell to the former Bamboo Union (竹聯幫) leader. Police dispatched several hundred uniformed and plain-clothed officers to stand guard, in addition to setting up equipment to videotape the entire service. Chen died of pancreatic cancer in Hong Kong on Oct. 4. He was 64. The Criminal Investigation Bureau said that senior officers from Taipei City's 14 precincts have organized a special task force to identify gang members so fellow officers could take pictures of them and set up their file records for future reference. Kao Cheng-sheng (高政昇), deputy commissioner for the bureau, estimated that at least 600 gang members from Taipei, Taoyuan, Taichung and Chiayi took part in the funeral yesterday. Thirty alleged gang members were interrogated by police yesterday for carrying guns, baseball bats and shock rods to the venue, he said. Chen Chi-li was best known for his involvement in the October 1984 assassination of Chinese-American writer Henry Liu (江南) at his home in San Francisco, before he could complete a critical biography of then president Chiang Ching-kuo (蔣經國). Chen was arrested in Taiwan one month later during a crackdown on organized crime. At his trial, Chen Chi-li said he had carried out the murder at the request of Admiral Wang Hsi-ling (汪希苓), the head of the Military Intelligence Bureau, who suspected Liu of spying for Taiwan, China and the US. Wang said in court that he gave Chen Chi-li the order to carry out the assassination out of patriotism. Chen was sentenced to life in prison but released on parole in 1991 after a pardon. He later fled to Cambodia during another clampdown on organized crime and had lived in self-imposed exile there since 1996. At a separate setting yesterday, President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) said the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) administration will never train people like Chen Chi-li to assassinate dissidents. "Unlike the former KMT government, we will not send Chen Chi-li to take people out," he said. "We respect dissenting voices because the DPP is a party of such nature. We are not like the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) that decides everything by one man's say," he said. President Chen made the remark after a heckler disrupted him while he was answering a question from the media after attending exhibitions at the World Trade Center. The president was distracted when the heckler shouted, "We have such a hard time living a decent life." He soon regained his composure and said he heard what the man said and did not mind the disturbance because it is a democratic and pluralistic society. The heckler apparently lived a decent life or he would not have had the time, mood and money to see the exhibitions, President Chen said of the incident at another setting later yesterday. "I did not want to embarrass him but I was quite amused," he said. "We tolerate and respect different opinions, because that is the essence of democracy," he said. "Although opposition parties and some in the media humiliate me and the DPP administration on a daily basis, I am proud to say that their freedom of speech and press are well protected," he said. Additional reporting by AFP and staff writer |
| Hollander |
Posted: Nov 9 2007, 05:20 AM
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Friend of Ours ![]() Group: Friend of Ours Posts: 5,258 Member No.: 4 Joined: 3-April 06 |
King Duck Goes to His Taiwanese Reward
Tag it:Mark Oneill 24 October 2007 An old-time Chinese gangster comes home to a funeral fit for a king Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall When Chen Chi-li returned to Taiwan for the last time, a motorcade of three black limousines and five coaches carried him to a memorial hall lined with 2,000 white orchids and Buddhist priests chanting sutras. The Taipei police mobilized 1,000 officers for the event. On November 4, thousands of mourners, including Chen抯 associates from Japan, Hong Kong and Macau, will assemble for a memorial service. Such a send off might be fit for a national celebrity, a religious figure or film star, but Chen was none of these. 揔ing Duck, as the 64-year old was known, headed the Bamboo Union Gang, the largest criminal syndicate in Taiwan, which had 100,000 members worldwide at the height of its power and branches in the United States, Latin America, Southeast Asia and South Korea. A fugitive who left Taiwan in 1996 and settled in Cambodia, Chen died of pancreatic cancer in St Theresa抯 hospital in Hong Kong on October 4. His return in the middle of an intense campaign for next March抯 presidential election is a dramatic and unsavory reminder of how deeply China抯 fabled gangsters were entwined with the Kuomintang party that ruled China and then Taiwan and how the party used criminal gangs to intimidate and kill opponents, giving them a measure of immunity in return. According to many biographies of Chiang Kai-shek, the very founding of the Kuomintang in Shanghai was closely entangled with organized crime, although the Bamboo Union Gang was born in Taiwan. Chiang used the infamous Green Gang, and its godfather 揃ig Eared Du, to stage a murderous purge of Communist Party members in Shanghai in 1927 when Chiang抯 alliance of convenience with the Left fell apart. For his service, Du was appointed by Chiang to head the Board of Opium Suppression Bureau in Shanghai which did nothing to suppress opium further cementing the Green Gang抯 privileged status with the British and French, who ran their respective concessions and used the gang to police the Chinese brothels, opium dens and gambling parlours. When Chiang and the defeated nationalist movement decamped for Taiwan in 1949, the gangland connections moved with him across the strait. It is a measure of the maturing of Taiwan抯 politics that the party抯 gangland connections have diminished. Public opinion has forced the KMT to sell or divest itself of many of its companies and other assets, many of which were linked to organized crime. One result of the transition to democratic politics has been a reduction of these links and greater transparency. The live coverage of Chen抯 return and next month抯 service, which the media are calling 搕he gang funeral of the century, has sparked intense anger. President Chen Shui-bian said the media should not mislead people into believing that the deceased gangster was a hero. The president抯 wife was left in a wheelchair after a car ran over her three times in November 1985, an attack often blamed on gangs hired by the Kuomintang. The debate today over Chen Chi-li is whether he was a 損atriot. His opponents call him a murderer and a criminal. The crime for which he became most infamous was the murder, on October 15, 1984, of Henry Liu, also known by the pen name Jiang Nan, an author who had written a biography critical of President Chiang Ching-kuo, the son of Chiang Kai-shek. Chen抯 supporters say he was acting on behalf of the government and the KMT in killing Liu in his home in a suburb of Los Angeles. It was to have profound consequences. Chen and two others sought for the killing returned to Taiwan safely but the FBI found a tape which Chen, fearing he might be betrayed and killed by the Kuomintang, had left with a fellow gang member named Yellow Bird in Houston, Texas. The tape led FBI agents to discover that Taiwanese intelligence agents had ordered the murder of a US citizen on American soil. Washington put such pressure on the Taiwanese government that it was forced to arrest Chen and his two accomplices and the three senior officers in military intelligence who had planned it. In 1990 the government paid US$1.45 million in compensation to Liu抯 widow. Some suspect Chiang Hsiao-wu, the son of Chiang Ching-kuo, of involvement in the plot. Whatever the truth, Chiang Ching-kuo decided that none of his children would succeed him in office and ended martial law in July 1987. The botched killing and the opprobrium it brought on his country and his party played a part in his decision and helped the new opposition Democratic Progressive Party to gain legitimacy and ultimately come to power. Chen was born on May 11, 1943 in Jiangsu province and went to Taiwan at the age of six, when his father, a KMT civil servant, fled the mainland. At school, he received a baptism of fire as one of only three mainland children in a class full of Taiwanese. They were subject to constant bullying as revenge for the massacre of Taiwanese carried out by the Kuomintang army in 1947, he recalled later. In his teens, Chen became a member of a branch of the Bamboo Union Gang and rose in the hierarchy as he took over territory from other gangs. In April 1968, at a meeting on a mountain overlooking Taipei, he was formally installed as the gang抯 leader and given the nickname King Duck. In 1972, he was sentenced to four-years in prison for involvement in the murder of a renegade gangster. When he came out, he resumed his post and forged good relations with the police, who used the mob to control other gangs in exchange for more freedom for its activities. In 1983, in a true burst of hubris, he set up a weekly magazine to report on the activities of Taiwan抯 gangs. So it was that he agreed to kill Liu. As leader, he could have ordered an underling to carry out the operation but chose to do it in person. 揑 felt that this was a duty of a patriotic citizen, he told an interviewer 20 years later. 揑 did not think about whom I was doing it for. He refused the US$20,000 reward offered to him. Chen served less than six years of the life sentence he received for the crime, was released in January 1991 and returned to the Bamboo Union Gang. In 1996, hearing that the police were coming for him, he escaped to Cambodia, where he went into property and other businesses and made friends with the country抯 national leaders. He bought a luxury mansion in Phnom Penh and did charity work for the city抯 poor. He entertained visiting Taiwanese and said how much he wanted to return home. But he was unable to agree on the terms of this return. He demanded that he be properly welcomed at the airport and not arrested, but the authorities refused. In 2000, he displayed his mansion抯 weapons on Taiwan television, provoking Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen into ordering a raid by 100 police and soldiers. They found 12 AK-47s and M-16 automatics, hand pistols and 2,000 bullets. A court in Phnom Penh sentenced him to three years in jail for illegal possession of firearms. After his release, he was less active, spending his time on calligraphy and swimming. 揑n this world, there are no truly good and no truly evil people, he was quoted as telling a visiting friend. 揥hether a man does good or evil depends on the change of time, place and people. There are no fixed criteria. |
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