Anti-nuclear protesters confronted by Taipower ‘thug’ police: DPP lawmaker

The National Police Agency special police second headquarters has taken the lead in countering anti-nuclear activities and become a ‘thug’ for Taiwan Power (Taipower), Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Cheng Li-chun said yesterday.

Cheng said the headquarters’ website included an articled titled “The anti-nuclear trend is no longer fashionable”, which claims that anti-nuclear activists are irrational, use false data and base their views on the slim chance that a nuclear disaster might happen.

It cites the German Green party — a main proponent of anti-nuclear policy in Germany — as an example of the waning popularity of anti-nuclear views as it has often been defeated in elections.

“The economy is the lifeline of a nation and electricity is the lifeline of the economy. When our primary [economic] competitors are all fully committed to nuclear power, are we supposed to be led by the nose by the anti-nuclear activists who uses false data and threats of nuclear disasters?” the article says.

The article also mentions that due to the electoral failure of the German Green Party and the pressure of signatory countries to adhere to the Kyoto Protocol — an addendum to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change calling for the “stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system” — that many advanced countries are reconsidering their anti-nuclear policies.

Cheng said she wondered if the police force was using funding from Taipower to cover its personnel and administrative fees, effectively turning the national police into a “security force for Taipower” or its “political warfare department.”

The special police second headquarters is a professional police task force founded in accordance to the Nuclear Power Law and Taipower has commissioned it to send some of its men to stand guard around its three operational nuclear power plants, as well as the one still under construction, for NT$850 million (US$28.6 million).

The article on the headquarters’ Web site goes against the majority consensus of anti-nuclear policies and ignores the aftermath of the nuclear disaster at Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Japan in March last year, and uses outdated concepts and cites government Web sites to advocate keeping nuclear power on Taipower Co’s behalf, Cheng said.

Cheng added that Article 23 of the Basic Environment Act stipulates: “The government must establish plans to gradually achieve the goal of becoming a nuclear-free country,” adding that the headquarters’ website article has already violated the act and that the police agency should apologize for this and discipline those responsible for it.

Cheng also said that she would be inspecting the headquarters’ budget estimate to see if it contains evidence of a hidden agenda, adding that if there was such evidence she “would not let them get off without consequences.”

Meanwhile, Taiwan Green Party spokesman Pan Han-shen said police should be neutral and not endorse “brainwashing” efforts.

Pan added that the German Green Party’s defeat in the elections was because it had not been anti-nuclear enough to gain the support of the German people, adding that after the party made an amendment to its guidelines, it has regained popular support.

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