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Martial law in Taiwan

Martial law in Taiwan (Chinese: 戒嚴時期; pinyin: Jièyán Shíqí; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Kài-giâm sî-kî) refers to the periods in the history of Taiwan after World War II during control by the Republic of China Armed Forces of the Kuomintang-led Government of the Republic of China regime. The term is specifically used to refer to the over 38-year-long consecutive martial law period between 20 May 1949 and 14 July 1987, which was qualified as "the longest imposition of martial law by a regime anywhere in the world"[1] at that time (having since been surpassed by Syria.[2]).

Martial law in Taiwan
Traditional Chinese戒嚴時期
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinJièyán Shíqí
Wade–GilesChieh⁴-yen² Shih²-ch′i²
Hakka
Pha̍k-fa-sṳKie-ngiàm sṳ̀-khì
Southern Min
Hokkien POJKài-giâm sî-kî
Tâi-lôKài-giâm sî-kî
Declaration of Martial Law in Taiwan Province
Traditional Chinese臺灣省戒嚴令
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTáiwān Shěng Jièyán Lìng
Wade–GilesT′ai²-wan¹ Shêng³ Chieh⁴-yen² Ling⁴
Hakka
Pha̍k-fa-sṳThòi-vàn-sén Kie-ngiàm Lin
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTâi-oân-séng Kài-giâm Lēng
Tâi-lôTâi-uân-síng Kài-giâm Līng
Declaration of Martial Law in Taiwan Province
臺灣省戒嚴令
Original title臺灣省政府、臺灣省警備總司令部佈告戒字第壹號
Ratified19 May 1949
Date effective20 May 1949
Repealed15 July 1987
LocationTaipei, Taiwan, Republic of China
Commissioned byTaiwan Provincial Government and Taiwan Garrison Command
SignatoriesChen Cheng, Chairman and Commander
Presidential Order on
Lifting of Martial Law in Taiwan
臺灣地區解嚴令
Original title總統令
Ratified14 July 1987
Date effective15 July 1987
LocationOffice of the President, Taipei, Republic of China
Commissioned byGovernment of the Republic of China
SignatoriesChiang Ching-kuo, President
Yu Kuo-hwa, Premier
Cheng Wei-yuan, Minister of National Defense

With the outbreak of Chinese Civil War, the Declaration of Martial Law in Taiwan Province (Chinese: 臺灣省戒嚴令; pinyin: Táiwān Shěng Jièyán Lìng; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tâi-oân-séng Kài-giâm Lēng) was enacted by Chen Cheng, who served as the chairman of Taiwan Provincial Government and commander of Taiwan Garrison Command, on 19 May 1949. This order was effective within the territory of Taiwan Province (including Island of Taiwan and Penghu).[3] The provincial martial law order was then superseded by an amendment of the Declaration of Nationwide Martial Law which was enacted by the central Government of the Republic of China after the amendment received a retroactive consent by the Legislative Yuan on 14 March 1950. Martial law in Taiwan Area (including Island of Taiwan, Penghu) was lifted by a Presidential order promulgated by President Chiang Ching-kuo on 15 July 1987.[4]

History of martial law under the Republic of China

The history of martial law of the Republic of China (ROC) could be dated back to the final year of the Qing dynasty. The outline of a 1908 draft constitution—modeled on Japan's Meiji Constitution—included provisions for martial law.[5] The Provisional Government of the Republic of China promulgated the Provisional Constitution in March 1911, which authorized the President to declare martial law in times of emergency. The Martial Law Declaration Act (Chinese: 戒嚴法; pinyin: Jièyánfǎ; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Kài-giâm-hoat) were issued by the Nationalist Government later in 1920s and amended in 1940s. After the surrender of Japan in August 1945, the Republic of China occupied Taiwan on behalf of the Allies. The martial law was declared twice in Taiwan in 1947, due to the February 28 incident.

At the same time, the Chinese Civil War was also raging in the Republic of China. In April 1948, the newly elected National Assembly passed the Temporary Provisions against the Communist Rebellion as a constitutional amendment. This became the factual legal basis for the martial law in effect between 1948 and 1987.[6]

The situation became worse in later months. In September 1949, Chen Cheng then submitted a request to Premier Yen Hsi-shan, proposing to amend the second Declaration of Nationwide Martial Law to add Hainan and Taiwan into the War Zone. However, the Acting President Li Tsung-jen then fled to Hong Kong in November 1949 and did not ratify the amendment.

The outcome of the Chinese Civil War forced the Kuomintang-led Government of the Republic of China retreated to Taiwan since 7 December 1949. On 14 March 1950, the restored session of the Legislative Yuan subsequently endorsed the second Declaration of Nationwide Martial along with the amendment proposed by Executive Yuan Premier Yen Hsi-shan to add Hainan and Taiwan into the War Zone. This makes the Declaration of Nationwide Martial supersede the provincial martial law declaration. The situation remained unchanged until 1987 Lieyu Massacre.[8]

The procedure of the ratification of the martial law declarations was significantly flawed as found by an investigation conducted by Control Yuan.[9][10]

Influence of martial law

In December 1949, the Kuomintang-led government of the Republic of China retreated to Taiwan. The ROC continued to claim sovereignty over all "China", which the ROC defines to include mainland China, Taiwan, Outer Mongolia and other areas while the Communist People's Republic of China claimed to be the only China and that the ROC no longer existed. Thus, the two regimes entered a new era of confrontation and the martial law became one of the most important laws to "suppress Communist and Taiwan Independent activities in Taiwan", issuing the emergency declaration.

Also in the year 1949, a series of relevant regulations were promulgated by ROC government, including the Regulations to prevent unlawful assembly, association, procession, petition, strike under martial law, the Measures to regulate newspapers, magazines and book publication under the martial law and the Regulations for the punishment of rebellions.

Under the martial law, the formation of new political parties was prohibited except the Kuomintang (KMT), the Chinese Youth Party and the China Democratic Socialist Party. In order to implement the strict political censorship, the lianzuo or collective responsibility system was adopted among the civil servants from 9 July 1949 and soon spread to all the enterprises and institutions, according to which no one would be employed without a guarantor.

The government was authorized by the martial law to deny the right of assembly, free speech and publication in Taiwanese Hokkien. Newspapers were asked to run propaganda articles or make last-minute editorial changes to suit the government's needs. At the beginning of the martial law era, "newspapers could not exceed six pages. The number was increased to eight pages in 1958, 10 in 1967 and 12 in 1974. There were only 31 newspapers, 15 of which were owned by either the KMT, the government or the military."[11]

Taiwan Garrison Command had sweeping powers, including the right to arrest anyone voicing criticism of government policy and to screen publications prior to distribution. According to a recent report by the Executive Yuan of Taiwan, around 140,000 Taiwanese were arrested, tortured, imprisoned or executed for their real or perceived opposition to the KMT and 3000–4000 people were executed during the martial law period. Since these people were mainly from the intellectual and social elite an entire generation of political and social leaders was decimated.

Lifting of martial law

Enforcement was slowly relaxed after Chiang Kai-shek's death in 1975, but continued until the exposure of the Donggang Incident by international media reportage and the follow-up Parliament questioning by newly elected Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) members in June 1987. The lifting of martial law was proclaimed by President Chiang Ching-kuo on 14 July, followed by the liberalization and democratization of Taiwan.[12][13] Before that, the Democratic Progressive Party was illegally established in September 1986 and won 22.2% of the vote in the Legislative Yuan election and 18.9% of the vote in the National Assembly that year.[14][15][16]

Lifting of martial law permitted opposition political parties to be formed legally for the first time, giving Taiwan's fragmented but increasingly vocal opposition a new chance to organize. But even after the law was lifted, tight restrictions on freedom of assembly, speech and the press remained in place, having been written into a National Security Law, which had been passed a few days before the lifting of martial law.[17]

All declarations of martial law based on the Temporary Provisions against the Communist Rebellion were lifted when the Temporary Provisions were repealed on 1 May 1991. However, the Ministry of National Defense then issued a temporary declaration of martial law effective in the frontier region including Fukien Province (Kinmen and Matsu) and South China Sea Islands (Tungsha, and Taiping Island in Nansha). This temporary martial law was formally lifted on 7 November 1992, marking a turn to constitutional democracy for the entire Free area of the Republic of China, though the statutory restriction on civilians' traveling to Kinmen or Matsu remained effective until 13 May 1994.[18]

Compensation and memorials

In 1998, a law was passed to create the "Compensation Foundation for Improper Verdicts" which oversaw compensation to White Terror victims and families.[19][20] From 1998 to 2014, the foundation received 10,065 files. 1,940 were rejected for not relating to victims of the White Terror, as were 96 others under article 8 of the 1998 Compensation Act, whilst 7,965 applications were accepted, and 20,340 people were compensated.

In 2007, the Executive Yuan designated 15 July as "Commemoration Day of the Lifting of Martial Law".[21] President Ma Ying-jeou made an official apology in 2008, expressing hope that there would never be a tragedy similar to White Terror.[22]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Mulvenon, James C (2003). A Poverty of riches: new challenges and opportunities in PLA research. Rand Corporation. p. 172. ISBN 0-8330-3469-3.
  2. ^ Barker, Anne (28 March 2011). "Syria to end 48 years of martial law". ABC/Wire. ABC News. Retrieved 30 September 2014.
  3. ^ Han Chueng (15 May 2016). "Taiwan in Time: The precursor to total control". Taipei Times. p. 12. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  4. ^ "Declaration of the Lifting of Martial Law Starting 12AM on 15 July 1987". National Central Library Gazette Online. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  5. ^ Mulvenon (2003), p. 171.
  6. ^ 宜蘭市志—國府時期(1945~1961)
  7. ^ 全國戒嚴令
  8. ^ Zheng Jing, Cheng Nan-jung, Ye Xiangzhi, Xu Manqing (13 June 1987). <Shocking inside story of the Kinmen Military Murder Case>. Freedom Era Weekly, Ver 175-176.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ 臺灣發布戒嚴是否符合法定程序—監察院提調查報告
  10. ^ 監院報告:38年戒嚴令—發布有瑕疵
  11. ^ "Taiwanese Society Under Martial Law Remembered". 15 July 2007. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
  12. ^ Guan Ren-jian (1 September 2011). <The Taiwan you don't know: Stories of ROC Arm Forces>. Puomo Digital Publishing. ISBN 9789576636493.(in Chinese)
  13. ^ "Taiwan Ends 4 Decades of Martial Law". The New York Times. Associated Press. 15 July 1987. Retrieved 8 October 2011.
  14. ^ Copper, John F. (1987). "Taiwan in 1986: Back on Top again". Asian Survey. 27 (1): 81–91. doi:10.2307/2644602. JSTOR 2644602.
  15. ^ Copper, John F. (1990). "Taiwan's Recent Elections: Fulfilling the Democratic Promise". Maryland Series in Contemporary Asian Studies. 1990 (6): 45–64. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
  16. ^ "Taiwan Communiqué no. 28". International Committee for Human Rights in Taiwan. January 1987. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
  17. ^ Gluck, Caroline (13 July 2007). "Remembering Taiwan's martial law". BBC News. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
  18. ^ Art. 3, the Act on the Security and Assistance for Kinmen, Matsu, Tungsha, and Nansha (jinmen mazu dongsha nansha anquan ji fudao tiaoli, 金門馬祖東沙南沙地區安全及輔導條例), version in effect from 7 November 1992, to 12 May 1994. "《世紀金門百年輝煌》建縣百年 金門大事紀". 金門日報特訊月刊. 29 September 2014. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  19. ^ Stolojan, Vladimir; Guill, Elizabeth (2017). "Transitional Justice and Collective Memory in Taiwan: How Taiwanese Society is Coming to Terms with Its Authoritarian Past". China Perspectives. 110 (2017/2): 27–35. doi:10.4000/chinaperspectives.7327. JSTOR 26380503.
  20. ^ "Compensation Act for Wrongful Trials on Charges of Sedition and Espionage during the Martial Law Period". Laws & Regulations Database of the Republic of China (Taiwan). Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  21. ^ "Chen marks 1987 martial-law abolition". Taiwan Today. 20 July 2007. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  22. ^ Gluck, Caroline (16 July 2008). "Taiwan sorry for white terror era". BBC News. London. Retrieved 15 December 2022.

References

  • Taiwan ends Martial Law after 38 Years

martial, taiwan, chinese, 戒嚴時期, pinyin, jièyán, shíqí, kài, giâm, refers, periods, history, taiwan, after, world, during, control, republic, china, armed, forces, kuomintang, government, republic, china, regime, term, specifically, used, refer, over, year, lon. Martial law in Taiwan Chinese 戒嚴時期 pinyin Jieyan Shiqi Pe h ōe ji Kai giam si ki refers to the periods in the history of Taiwan after World War II during control by the Republic of China Armed Forces of the Kuomintang led Government of the Republic of China regime The term is specifically used to refer to the over 38 year long consecutive martial law period between 20 May 1949 and 14 July 1987 which was qualified as the longest imposition of martial law by a regime anywhere in the world 1 at that time having since been surpassed by Syria 2 Martial law in TaiwanTraditional Chinese戒嚴時期TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinJieyan ShiqiWade GilesChieh yen Shih ch i HakkaPha k fa sṳKie ngiam sṳ khiSouthern MinHokkien POJKai giam si kiTai loKai giam si kiDeclaration of Martial Law in Taiwan ProvinceTraditional Chinese臺灣省戒嚴令TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinTaiwan Sheng Jieyan LingWade GilesT ai wan Sheng Chieh yen Ling HakkaPha k fa sṳThoi van sen Kie ngiam LinSouthern MinHokkien POJTai oan seng Kai giam LengTai loTai uan sing Kai giam LingDeclaration of Martial Law in Taiwan Province臺灣省戒嚴令Original title臺灣省政府 臺灣省警備總司令部佈告戒字第壹號Ratified19 May 1949Date effective20 May 1949Repealed15 July 1987LocationTaipei Taiwan Republic of ChinaCommissioned byTaiwan Provincial Government and Taiwan Garrison CommandSignatoriesChen Cheng Chairman and CommanderPresidential Order onLifting of Martial Law in Taiwan臺灣地區解嚴令Original title總統令Ratified14 July 1987Date effective15 July 1987LocationOffice of the President Taipei Republic of ChinaCommissioned byGovernment of the Republic of ChinaSignatoriesChiang Ching kuo PresidentYu Kuo hwa PremierCheng Wei yuan Minister of National DefenseWith the outbreak of Chinese Civil War the Declaration of Martial Law in Taiwan Province Chinese 臺灣省戒嚴令 pinyin Taiwan Sheng Jieyan Ling Pe h ōe ji Tai oan seng Kai giam Leng was enacted by Chen Cheng who served as the chairman of Taiwan Provincial Government and commander of Taiwan Garrison Command on 19 May 1949 This order was effective within the territory of Taiwan Province including Island of Taiwan and Penghu 3 The provincial martial law order was then superseded by an amendment of the Declaration of Nationwide Martial Law which was enacted by the central Government of the Republic of China after the amendment received a retroactive consent by the Legislative Yuan on 14 March 1950 Martial law in Taiwan Area including Island of Taiwan Penghu was lifted by a Presidential order promulgated by President Chiang Ching kuo on 15 July 1987 4 Contents 1 History of martial law under the Republic of China 2 Influence of martial law 3 Lifting of martial law 4 Compensation and memorials 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesHistory of martial law under the Republic of China EditThe history of martial law of the Republic of China ROC could be dated back to the final year of the Qing dynasty The outline of a 1908 draft constitution modeled on Japan s Meiji Constitution included provisions for martial law 5 The Provisional Government of the Republic of China promulgated the Provisional Constitution in March 1911 which authorized the President to declare martial law in times of emergency The Martial Law Declaration Act Chinese 戒嚴法 pinyin Jieyanfǎ Pe h ōe ji Kai giam hoat were issued by the Nationalist Government later in 1920s and amended in 1940s After the surrender of Japan in August 1945 the Republic of China occupied Taiwan on behalf of the Allies The martial law was declared twice in Taiwan in 1947 due to the February 28 incident The first martial law was enacted by Chen Yi Chief Executive of Taiwan Province in 28 February It was lifted shortly in 2 March by the request from members of the Taiwan Representative Council and the National Assembly hoping to cool down the tension The incident broke out to a wide protest on economic collapse due to the Kuomintang s occupation administration Then the second martial law was enacted by Chen Yi again in 9 March The tension of the incidents made the Republic of China to reform the Taiwan Provincial Government After the incident was fully repressed the martial law was lifted on 16 May 1947 by the first Chairman of Taiwan Provincial Government Wei Tao ming At the same time the Chinese Civil War was also raging in the Republic of China In April 1948 the newly elected National Assembly passed the Temporary Provisions against the Communist Rebellion as a constitutional amendment This became the factual legal basis for the martial law in effect between 1948 and 1987 6 The first declaration of nationwide martial law was enacted by President Chiang Kai shek on 10 December 1948 The declaration was effective nationwide except in Sinkiang Sikang Tsinghai Tibet Area and Taiwan The territory in the north of Yangtze River was declared as the War Zone and the south was declared as the Alert Zone With the continuing of the civil war Chiang resigned as president on 21 January 1949 as KMT forces suffered terrible losses and defections to the Chinese Communist Party The Vice President Li Tsung jen was then sworn in as the Acting President He decided to lift the nationwide martial law in 24 January to ease the situation to conduct negotiations with the Chinese Communist Party As an increasing number of refugees of the Chinese Civil War fled to Taiwan the Declaration of Martial Law in Taiwan Province was enacted by Chen Cheng who served as the chairman of Taiwan Provincial Government and commander of Taiwan Garrison Command on 19 May 1949 This order was effective within the territory of Taiwan Province The negotiations between the Kuomintang and the Chinese Communist Party failed The second declaration of nationwide martial law was enacted by Acting President Li Tsung jen on 7 July 1949 7 This declaration also excluded the five divisions as the first declaration but all the south of Yangtze provinces became War Zone including the Fukien Province under which Kinmen and Matsu The situation became worse in later months In September 1949 Chen Cheng then submitted a request to Premier Yen Hsi shan proposing to amend the second Declaration of Nationwide Martial Law to add Hainan and Taiwan into the War Zone However the Acting President Li Tsung jen then fled to Hong Kong in November 1949 and did not ratify the amendment The outcome of the Chinese Civil War forced the Kuomintang led Government of the Republic of China retreated to Taiwan since 7 December 1949 On 14 March 1950 the restored session of the Legislative Yuan subsequently endorsed the second Declaration of Nationwide Martial along with the amendment proposed by Executive Yuan Premier Yen Hsi shan to add Hainan and Taiwan into the War Zone This makes the Declaration of Nationwide Martial supersede the provincial martial law declaration The situation remained unchanged until 1987 Lieyu Massacre 8 The procedure of the ratification of the martial law declarations was significantly flawed as found by an investigation conducted by Control Yuan 9 10 Influence of martial law EditMain articles White Terror Taiwan and Language Policy in Taiwan s White Terror In December 1949 the Kuomintang led government of the Republic of China retreated to Taiwan The ROC continued to claim sovereignty over all China which the ROC defines to include mainland China Taiwan Outer Mongolia and other areas while the Communist People s Republic of China claimed to be the only China and that the ROC no longer existed Thus the two regimes entered a new era of confrontation and the martial law became one of the most important laws to suppress Communist and Taiwan Independent activities in Taiwan issuing the emergency declaration Also in the year 1949 a series of relevant regulations were promulgated by ROC government including the Regulations to prevent unlawful assembly association procession petition strike under martial law the Measures to regulate newspapers magazines and book publication under the martial law and the Regulations for the punishment of rebellions Under the martial law the formation of new political parties was prohibited except the Kuomintang KMT the Chinese Youth Party and the China Democratic Socialist Party In order to implement the strict political censorship the lianzuo or collective responsibility system was adopted among the civil servants from 9 July 1949 and soon spread to all the enterprises and institutions according to which no one would be employed without a guarantor The government was authorized by the martial law to deny the right of assembly free speech and publication in Taiwanese Hokkien Newspapers were asked to run propaganda articles or make last minute editorial changes to suit the government s needs At the beginning of the martial law era newspapers could not exceed six pages The number was increased to eight pages in 1958 10 in 1967 and 12 in 1974 There were only 31 newspapers 15 of which were owned by either the KMT the government or the military 11 Taiwan Garrison Command had sweeping powers including the right to arrest anyone voicing criticism of government policy and to screen publications prior to distribution According to a recent report by the Executive Yuan of Taiwan around 140 000 Taiwanese were arrested tortured imprisoned or executed for their real or perceived opposition to the KMT and 3000 4000 people were executed during the martial law period Since these people were mainly from the intellectual and social elite an entire generation of political and social leaders was decimated Lifting of martial law EditEnforcement was slowly relaxed after Chiang Kai shek s death in 1975 but continued until the exposure of the Donggang Incident by international media reportage and the follow up Parliament questioning by newly elected Democratic Progressive Party DPP members in June 1987 The lifting of martial law was proclaimed by President Chiang Ching kuo on 14 July followed by the liberalization and democratization of Taiwan 12 13 Before that the Democratic Progressive Party was illegally established in September 1986 and won 22 2 of the vote in the Legislative Yuan election and 18 9 of the vote in the National Assembly that year 14 15 16 Lifting of martial law permitted opposition political parties to be formed legally for the first time giving Taiwan s fragmented but increasingly vocal opposition a new chance to organize But even after the law was lifted tight restrictions on freedom of assembly speech and the press remained in place having been written into a National Security Law which had been passed a few days before the lifting of martial law 17 All declarations of martial law based on the Temporary Provisions against the Communist Rebellion were lifted when the Temporary Provisions were repealed on 1 May 1991 However the Ministry of National Defense then issued a temporary declaration of martial law effective in the frontier region including Fukien Province Kinmen and Matsu and South China Sea Islands Tungsha and Taiping Island in Nansha This temporary martial law was formally lifted on 7 November 1992 marking a turn to constitutional democracy for the entire Free area of the Republic of China though the statutory restriction on civilians traveling to Kinmen or Matsu remained effective until 13 May 1994 18 Compensation and memorials EditIn 1998 a law was passed to create the Compensation Foundation for Improper Verdicts which oversaw compensation to White Terror victims and families 19 20 From 1998 to 2014 the foundation received 10 065 files 1 940 were rejected for not relating to victims of the White Terror as were 96 others under article 8 of the 1998 Compensation Act whilst 7 965 applications were accepted and 20 340 people were compensated In 2007 the Executive Yuan designated 15 July as Commemoration Day of the Lifting of Martial Law 21 President Ma Ying jeou made an official apology in 2008 expressing hope that there would never be a tragedy similar to White Terror 22 See also EditHistory of Taiwan since 1945 Period of mobilization for the suppression of Communist rebellion Censorship in TaiwanNotes Edit Mulvenon James C 2003 A Poverty of riches new challenges and opportunities in PLA research Rand Corporation p 172 ISBN 0 8330 3469 3 Barker Anne 28 March 2011 Syria to end 48 years of martial law ABC Wire ABC News Retrieved 30 September 2014 Han Chueng 15 May 2016 Taiwan in Time The precursor to total control Taipei Times p 12 Retrieved 15 May 2016 Declaration of the Lifting of Martial Law Starting 12AM on 15 July 1987 National Central Library Gazette Online Retrieved 14 July 2017 Mulvenon 2003 p 171 宜蘭市志 國府時期 1945 1961 全國戒嚴令 Zheng Jing Cheng Nan jung Ye Xiangzhi Xu Manqing 13 June 1987 lt Shocking inside story of the Kinmen Military Murder Case gt Freedom Era Weekly Ver 175 176 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 臺灣發布戒嚴是否符合法定程序 監察院提調查報告 監院報告 38年戒嚴令 發布有瑕疵 Taiwanese Society Under Martial Law Remembered 15 July 2007 Retrieved 20 September 2011 Guan Ren jian 1 September 2011 lt The Taiwan you don t know Stories of ROC Arm Forces gt Puomo Digital Publishing ISBN 9789576636493 in Chinese Taiwan Ends 4 Decades of Martial Law The New York Times Associated Press 15 July 1987 Retrieved 8 October 2011 Copper John F 1987 Taiwan in 1986 Back on Top again Asian Survey 27 1 81 91 doi 10 2307 2644602 JSTOR 2644602 Copper John F 1990 Taiwan s Recent Elections Fulfilling the Democratic Promise Maryland Series in Contemporary Asian Studies 1990 6 45 64 Retrieved 16 December 2022 Taiwan Communique no 28 International Committee for Human Rights in Taiwan January 1987 Retrieved 16 December 2022 Gluck Caroline 13 July 2007 Remembering Taiwan s martial law BBC News Retrieved 20 September 2011 Art 3 the Act on the Security and Assistance for Kinmen Matsu Tungsha and Nansha jinmen mazu dongsha nansha anquan ji fudao tiaoli 金門馬祖東沙南沙地區安全及輔導條例 version in effect from 7 November 1992 to 12 May 1994 世紀金門百年輝煌 建縣百年 金門大事紀 金門日報特訊月刊 29 September 2014 Retrieved 9 August 2019 Stolojan Vladimir Guill Elizabeth 2017 Transitional Justice and Collective Memory in Taiwan How Taiwanese Society is Coming to Terms with Its Authoritarian Past China Perspectives 110 2017 2 27 35 doi 10 4000 chinaperspectives 7327 JSTOR 26380503 Compensation Act for Wrongful Trials on Charges of Sedition and Espionage during the Martial Law Period Laws amp Regulations Database of the Republic of China Taiwan Retrieved 15 December 2022 Chen marks 1987 martial law abolition Taiwan Today 20 July 2007 Retrieved 15 December 2022 Gluck Caroline 16 July 2008 Taiwan sorry for white terror era BBC News London Retrieved 15 December 2022 References EditTaiwan ends Martial Law after 38 Years Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Martial law in Taiwan amp oldid 1153005990, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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