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| DOUBLE STANDARD? Civil servants are required to register banquets
  and gifts, but among 700,000 records, none were from the Presidential Office
  or Executive Yuan By
  Chung Li-hua and Jason Pan  /  Staff
  Reporter, with Staff Writer Tue,
  May 20, 2014 - Page 1 President
  Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) highly touted drive to
  implement tough measures to root out corruption is empty rhetoric, political
  pundits said, as they drew on information from government databases to make
  their case. When
  Ma first assumed the presidency in May 2008, the government drew up the
  Regulations on Civil Servants’ Ethics and Rectitude
  (公務員廉政倫理規範),
  which prohibited civil servants from receiving gifts or gratuities from
  parties with vested interests, or attending dinners or receiving
  entertainment hosted by such parties. Exceptions
  are made for “traditional festive events” and those of “ceremonial protocol
  in the conduct of civil servants carrying out official duties.” However,
  in these cases, they must receive approval from supervisors, report to their
  department’s ethics office and make an official record of attending such
  events, the regulations say. However,
  the past six years of records held by the Ministry of Justice’s Agency
  Against Corruption show that while there are more than 700,000 records of
  civil servants receiving gifts, attending banquets and being asked to lobby
  on government project cases, other than receiving gifts, the Presidential
  Office and the Executive Yuan have made no such declarations of gratuities,
  critics said. Political
  pundits said that at the end of legislative sessions, lawmakers on
  legislative committees traditionally host banquets, with top officials from
  the Presidential Office, Executive Yuan and government ministries in
  attendance. Of
  the numerous civil servants at the Presidential Office and the Executive Yuan
  in attendance, not a single one has reported attending such banquets, critics
  said. Critics
  said that Ma and his successive premiers have also frequented numerous
  banquets of various sizes and similar high-level dinner functions. For
  example, they said, Ma was an invited guest at the annual European Day dinner
  hosted by the European Chamber of Commerce Taipei (ECCT) on Thursday last
  week. Over
  the past six years, Ma has also attended annual Lunar New Year banquet events
  hosted by the American Chamber of Commerce, as well as ones jointly organized
  by the Straits Exchange Foundation and Taiwanese business associations with
  investments in China, the pundits said. Premier
  Jiang Yi-huah (江宜樺) has also been a frequent guest at banquets
  hosted by Taiwan’s Chinese National Association of
  Industry and Commerce, they added. Critics
  questioned Ma and Jiang’s attendance at these functions after media reports
  about the American Chamber of Commerce pressuring the government to allow the
  import of US beef containing trace levels of ractopamine
  and the ECCT making requests to lift Taiwan’s ban on more than 2,000 products
  from China. In
  the reports, the ECCT said the lifting of the ban would facilitate the
  importation of European brand products into Taiwan, via China. “Is
  it not a conflict of interest likely to benefit certain parties of interest?”
  the critics asked, saying that the president and the premier should follow
  the rules for recording their participation at these banquet events. An
  official with the Agency Against Corruption responded that although the
  president and the premier must follow regulations on ethics, each case is to
  be assessed individually. “From
  the president and the premier down, there are several layers of civil
  servants. Clarification is needed about their direct influence on decisionmaking, or whether they are acting in accordance
  with responsibilities assigned by law. Therefore, we must not point to
  culpability all the way to the top,” the official said. However, National Tung Hwa University
  professor Shih Cheng-feng (施正鋒)
  disagreed. “Most civil servants are just following orders from above. The real decisionmaking lies with the president and the premier,
  so they must give clear accounts to the public,” Shih said. “Ma has always applied a double standard, with stringent requirements
  for others, but giving himself a wide berth to shirk
  his responsibilities,” Shih added. * 《Taipei Times》2014/05/20。 |