Kuo Yao-chi

Kuo Yao-chi
郭瑤琪
Minister of Transportation and Communications of the Republic of China
In office
25 January 2006  25 August 2006
Preceded by Lin Ling-san
Succeeded by Tsai Duei
Personal details
Born 13 March 1956
Hualien County, Taiwan
Nationality  Republic of China
Alma mater University of London

Kuo Yao-chi (Chinese: 郭瑤琪; pinyin: Guō Yáoqí) was born in Hualien, Taiwan. She was administrative official, former Minister of Transportation and Communications in the Republic of China.[1]

Kuo Yao-chi was fascinated in music since childhood and had won the first place of Taoyuan County Junior Piano Competition. Kuo graduated from National Cheng Kung University, the Department of Urban Planning; she went to England where she earned her master's degree in Urban Development and the New Town Development from University of London. Kuo passed the National Higher Examination for Urban Planning and was one of the few excellent female executives from the grassroots in Taiwan.

Kuo started her occupation as an assistant researcher at the Urban Design and Environmental Planning Lab in Tamkang University, a planner in the Taiwan Housing and Urban Development Bureau, senior planner in the Taipei Urban Planning Committee, section chief of the Public Works Bureau, and Information Team Leader. Kuo once handled a major urban planning project, saved more than 260 million NT dollar of public funds for the Taipei City Government and had been awarded an excellent performance by the Taipei City Government. Because of her devotion to work, she was appreciated by colleagues and the major. Kuo was promoted as a secretary general of the Public Works Bureau and after that the first female director general of the Public Housing Department in the Taipei City Government. Kuo had successfully solved sea sand houses, slanted houses, and radiation houses problems. She was reforming public housing rental management system, abolishing unfair manner priority waiting roster, and the first to create leasehold housing for low-income families. In year 2000, Kuo served as a director of Public Affairs of the Presidential Office, minister without portfolio, and chair of the Public Construction Commission of the Executive Yuan in 2002. Meanwhile, she also served as the CEO of the 921 Post-earthquake Disaster Recovery Commission to accelerate the reconstruction works. For Kuo’s great achievement in recovering and revitalizing the 921 earthquake disaster areas, she was elected as the Alumni Distinguished Achievement Award of the National Cheng Kung University in 2004.

In year 2006, Kuo served as a minister of the Ministry of Transportation and Communication, Republic of China. One of her great achievement was to complete and officially open the 12.9 km Hsuehshan tunnel (雪山隧道) -- Asia's longest and the world's fourth-longest.[2] However, She resigned her commission being responsible for the policy of electronic toll collection system (ETC).

Kuo Yao-chi is a devout Buddhist, often participates in the religious and social welfare activities, such as continuing to care the Xiao-lin Village reconstruction, assist surviving families’ livelihoods, initiated "School Nest” volunteer activities, and involving herself as a volunteer teacher. She brings the community together to care for children of low-income families in Tataocheng (大稻埕) area. Currently she is also caring for elderly parents with dementia..

Controversy

Whether The Private Participation In Infrastructure Project Of Taipei Main Station Bribed Or Not?

After Kuo leaving office, she was accused of receiving a bribe of US$20,000 by the prosecutors who monitoring chair of Nan Ren Hu Lee Ching-po (李清波) telling to his son Lee Tsung-hsien (李宗賢) to present two cans of tea to Kuo, and putting US$20,000 to help Kuo’s son studying abroad on the phone call in 2006.

The Supreme Court upheld the conviction handed down by the Taiwan High Court in March, which found Kuo guilty of accepting a bribe related to using her position as transportation minister to grant favors to the Nan Ren Hu Group, a service industry conglomerate, even though she had been found not guilty in first and second trials in 2009 and 2010 respectively.

“I have never received bribes... A reputation is not earned in one or two days. I have spent my entire career as a public servant building a good reputation. All my associates know I am not someone who can be bribed,” Kuo told a press conference in Taipei.

The former minister held a press conference insisting on her innocence. Kuo was accompanied by her lawyers Wellington Ku (顧立雄) and Li Yung-ran (李永然), as well as Taipei mayoral aspirant Dr. Ko Wen-je (柯文哲) and others. They all claimed the conviction was flawed because of insufficient evidence and inconsistent testimony from Lee Tsung-hsien, son of Nan Ren Hu chairman Lee Ching-po. They said they would sue Lee Tsung-hsien for perjury and request a retrial and an extraordinary appeal.

Lee Tsung-hsien testified that he had been asked by his father to deliver the cash, but he gave inconsistent information about the numbers, color and material of the tea gift boxes that contained the US$20,000 and were allegedly delivered to Kuo, at first saying that the cash was placed in two iron tea boxes.

He revoked his deposition after Kuo submitted a red tea box, which prosecutors failed to find in a raid of her house, and subsequently said that there was only one cardboard tea box.

The Ministry of Justice’s Investigation Bureau later canceled Lee Tsung-hsien’s original testimony, Koo said.

“In other words, Kuo’s conviction was upheld with inconsistent testimony and without any substantial evidence because no cash was never found — not in the tea box nor in any of Kuo’s or her family’s bank accounts,” Koo said. “I’m wondering if the judicial system applies a different set of standard for DPP politicians and government officials who served under the DPP administration.[3]

The opposition Democratic Progressive Party’s regular weekly Central Standing Committee meeting concluded with a call for a new review of the case to give Kuo an opportunity to clear her name, and voiced its support for former Transportation Minister Kuo Yao-chi.

The DPP motion praised Kuo’s performance in office during the administration of President Chen Shui-bian from 2000 to 2008 and warned against the political exploitation of the judiciary against the opposition in the run-up to the December 6, 2014 local elections.

Kuo appeared at a separate news conference earlier where she pleaded her innocence and received the support of former Cabinet colleagues and opposition activists.

Former DPP Chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen also released a statement supporting Kuo’s case for judicial redress.[4]

Call for Justice

Call for Justice for Minister Kuo Yao-chi: No Bribe, but a Heavy Sentence of Eight Years

Former Minister of Transportation and Communications Kuo Yao-chi was recently sentenced by the Supreme Court to eight years of imprisonment for the crime of “bribery.”[5] However, the ground for the judgment is so absurd that we must raise the following serious concerns.

1.The judges concluded that Minister Kuo received a bribe of USD 20,000, on a single piece of weak evidence, which is the testimony of Lee Tsung-hsien. However, Lee’s testimony is contradictory and written record and the recording of his oral statements prove that his testimony is “fabricated.” No physical evidence of any kind shows that Minister Kuo had accepted the bribe was ever produced. If this is sufficient to prove bribery, then any person can accuse anyone else based on his own unilateral statement, and Taiwan will never be at peace.

2.The key to the reasoning of the judgment is the judge found where was a “quid pro quo relationship.” However, such a relationship requires both the giving of the bribe as well as the delivery of benefit in return. In this case, not only does the existence of the bribe rest on such weak evidence, but Lee’s company did not even submit a bid during the government procurement in question. Furthermore, other officials from the Ministry testified that Minister Kuo gave no special instructions regarding that government procurement. In the official records of the Ministry’s meeting, it is recorded that she instructed, “Open explanations should be given to all bidding companies.” With no bribe been given and no benefit been provided, how can the court found there to be quid pro quo.

3.It is impossible to understand why a company would claim to have given a bribe but it did not participate in the bidding process. This defies logic and common sense. How could the judges believe such a story?

In fact, such character assassination by the judiciary has been going on for a long time. When Minister Kuo was questioned for the first time and while the questioning was still under way, certain journalist was citing a “source” and reported that Minister Kuo had already admitted accepting the bribe. The record of the questioning shows that she adamantly denied it. Because it is highly unlikely that the journalist would make such a report without some kind of tipoff from the prosecutors, this is clearly a character assassination by the judiciary.

Considering all the records of this case, it is clearly a miscarriage of justice. Therefore, we have initiated a petition to support Minister Kuo to request for a full rehearing of this case. At the same time, we will continue working on holding the irresponsible judges and prosecutors accountable. We will let the public know the kind of prosecutors and judges would convict a clean minister based on such weak evidence. Taiwan cannot allow such injustices any longer!

See also

References

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