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Tag: Investigation

Hidden Predators

The Reporter, one of Taiwan’s leading independent news outlets, broke new ground with its investigation into decades of concealed sexual abuse in Taiwan’s elementary schools, revealing how victims themselves — not officials or advocacy groups — finally brought a serial predator to justice.

The investigation centers on Liu Yu-cheng (劉育成), a former elementary school principal in Nantou County who sexually abused students across four schools over three decades. Unlike previous scandals exposed by NGOs or politicians, Liu’s crimes came to light when adult survivors connected online in 2023, conducting their own evidence-gathering campaign.

Chuang Chun-ching (莊純青) Photo: Lin Yan Ting (林彥廷), The Reporter (報導者).

Chuang Chun-ching (莊純青), abused by Liu in sixth grade, led the grassroots investigation. “Confronting these cases is also a way for me to heal my wounds,” she told The Reporter. Using Facebook and graduation yearbooks, the survivors identified 36 victims and witnesses, creating detailed files and chronologies that enabled authorities to launch their first comprehensive investigation.

The case exposes systemic failures in the past to protect children in Taiwan’s schools. When two girls reported Liu in 2003, school officials buried their complaints. Liu cultivated relationships with local politicians who shielded him from consequences, allowing the abuse to continue unchecked. The Reporter‘s investigation revealed similar patterns nationwide, including the case of Chang Po-Sheng (張博勝), a Tainan teacher who abused 30 students but received only a four-year sentence. The 2023 Gender Equity Education Act introduced reforms requiring thorough investigations, but statutes of limitations still prevent prosecution of many cases where victims speak out decades later.

Of 29 identified victims in Liu’s case, only four could pursue legal action due to time limits. Liu received a 15-year sentence, currently under appeal.

Citizen Soldier, Citizen Journalist

One week ago, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced that his intelligence services had identified at least 155 Chinese citizens fighting for Russia in Ukraine. “We are collecting information and we believe there are more, many more,” he said, adding that the Chinese government appeared to be “turning a blind eye” to recruitment efforts on Chinese social networks. China’s Foreign Ministry quickly called Zelensky’s claims “groundless,” but even this official response was non-existent in media coverage inside China. Meanwhile, the story received strong Chinese-language coverage in overseas outlets including Deutsche WelleRadio France InternationaleRadio Free Asia and Singapore’s Lianhe Zaobao (聯合早報).

But some of the most illuminating coverage had already emerged more than a week earlier — even before Zelensky’s public remarks. On March 30, former CCTV celebrity anchor Chai Jing (柴静) released an hour-long video special to her YouTube channel for which she interviewed Chinese fighters on both sides of the conflict. She spoke with “Ma Kalong” (马卡龙), a Russian-allied Chinese soldier, as well as several volunteer combatants fighting for Ukraine, such as Gao Shan (高山) and Peng Chenliang (彭陈亮), who was killed in action.

Chai suggests in her investigation that these fighters are not officially sent by China. However, the video released by Ukraine last week alludes tantalizingly to intermediaries, which points to networks in China that are likely recruiting fighters — a highly sensitive story one Chinese media insider tells us is just waiting to unfold.

According to Chai’s interviews, Russian-allied recruits are primarily motivated by financial incentives, while Ukraine’s Chinese volunteers cite ideological commitments to democracy and freedom. This contrast in motivation matches the stark difference in their treatment. While Russian-allied fighters describe poor equipment and conditions, Ukraine’s Chinese volunteers (though facing high casualty rates) express a sense of purpose in their choice. Chai Jing’s YouTube channel is chock full of excellent interviews, a welcome comeback from the former state journalist who once roused ordinary Chinese to share images of wasteful government buildings in China by saying: “You are a citizen, and you are a journalist.”