Aboriginal groups and law 
						experts yesterday slammed the Cabinet’s draft autonomy 
						act, saying lawsuits would be filed domestically and 
						internationally if the legislature approved it in the 
						current legislative session.
						
						The Indigenous Peoples 
						Action Coalition of Taiwan yesterday released a 
						statement saying the Cabinet’s proposal was 
						disrespectful, unconstitutional and violated the 
						Aboriginal Basic Act (原住民基本法).
						
						The statement said the 
						Aboriginal autonomous act proposed by President Ma Ying-jeou’s 
						(馬英九) administration was a backward bill that violated 
						the Constitution and the current global trend of 
						respecting Aborigines’ rights.
						
						Representatives from the 
						coalition called on legislators to boycott the bill and 
						also urged Aborigines not to vote for Ma and the 
						-Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) in the election Jan. 14 
						presidential and legislative elections.
						
						Describing the bill as an 
						“empty shell,” National Dong Hwa University College of 
						Indigenous Studies director Shih Cheng-feng (施正鋒) said 
						the bill did not grant Aborigines their own land.
						
						This being so, Shih asked 
						how Aborigines could establish their autonomous regions.
						
						He said the bill stipulated 
						that Aborigines could establish offices and councils in 
						their respective tribes, but it did not abolish current 
						administrative districts. This means that any executive 
						decisions made by tribal regions would have to negotiate 
						with township and county governments, which means they 
						would be likely to go nowhere.
						
						Amis representative Konon 
						Panay (古孟巴奈) said the central government did not define 
						and grant Aboriginal lands, but it has been depriving 
						Aborigines of their lands in the name of development.
						
						The Eastern Development Act 
						(東部發展條例) was approved in June by the legislature and 
						aims to develop land in Hualien and Taitung counties, 
						allowing big developers to destroy land traditionally 
						owned by Aborigines and threatening to ruin the lives of 
						Amis Aborigines, Panay said.