By Loa Iok-sin
                STAFF REPORTER 
                Sunday, Mar 16, 2008, Page 3 
				
                "Life is precious, think for two more minutes -- you don't 
                have to kill yourself," Buddhist Master Sheng Yen (聖嚴法師) 
                says. 
                
                Words of wisdom from an old master, it's a statement that local 
                politicians should keep in mind when making rash comments, such 
                as threatening suicide, academics said yesterday.
                
                After coming under fire from both the pan-blue and pan-green 
                camps for barging into Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) 
                presidential candidate Frank Hsieh's (謝長廷) campaign 
                headquarters on Wednesday, Legislator Alex Fai (費鴻泰) told 
                a press conference on Friday that if his action caused Chinese 
                Nationalist Party (KMT) presidential candidate Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) 
                to lose the election next Saturday, "I will not rule out 
                ending my own life."
                
                Fa quit his position as KMT caucus whip on Thursday and his 
                membership in the KMT on Friday as an expression of apology for 
                the potential damage he might have inflicted on Ma's election 
                bid.
                
                Fai is not the only politician who has offered to end his life.
                
                One day after Fai made such a remark, KMT Vice Chairman John 
                Kuan (關中) yesterday made a similar vow to prove his 
                innocence when DPP legislators Wang Sing-nan (王幸男) and Lee 
                Chun-yee (李俊毅) accused him of buying votes on behalf of 
                Ma. 
                
                Many also remember that last October, a Central Election 
                Commission member recommended by the People First Party, Chao 
                Shu-chien (趙叔鍵), also offered to commit seppuku "to 
                defend the dignity of an academic" if the commission voted 
                on whether the two planned referendums should be held alongside 
                the January legislative election.
                
                Seppuku is a Japanese ritual of committing suicide by 
                disembowelment.
                
                The commission did proceed to have a vote on it, and Chao didn't 
                follow through on his word, dismissing it later as a mere joke.
                
                Shih Cheng-feng (施正鋒), dean of the 
                College of Indigenous Studies at National Donghwa University, 
                said yesterday that seppuku is a Japanese ritual to show that a 
                person is ashamed of his own actions.
                
                "It's sacred and is morally very symbolic; however, the 
                politicians have made such vows a joke," he said.
                
                Tseng Chien-yuan (曾建元), a public administration professor 
                at Chunghua University, yesterday frowned on the rash statements 
                made by politicians.
                
                "Public issues should be discussed rationally in 
                society," Tseng said. "Threatening to commit suicide 
                is more like what terrorists or extremists would do." 
                
                While such rash words by politicians may have an impact on their 
                supporters to a certain degree, especially during a period when 
                tempers are running high as the election approaches, Tseng said 
                that making such comments "would create an atmosphere of 
                unrest in society, which is certainly negative."
                
                Kuan Chung-hsiang (管中祥), a professor at Shih Hsin 
                University's Department of Radio, Television and Film and the 
                president of Taiwan Media Watch, agreed.