Lei Chen
Lei Chen (Chinese : 雷震 ; pinyin : Léi Zhèn ; 8 July 1897 – 7 March 1979) was a Chinese politician and dissident who was the early leading figure in the movement to bring fuller democracy to the government of the Republic of China .
Born in Zhejiang in 1897,[ 1] Lei was educated at Kyoto Imperial University in Japan. His early political career included posts as the secretary-general of the National Political Assembly [zh ] and Constituent National Assembly [zh ] .[ 2] He also served on the Control Yuan ,[ 3] as minister without portfolio, and presidential adviser.[ 2]
Lei Chen helped found and produce the periodical Free China , published beginning in 1950.[ 4] [ 5] Lei was expelled from the Kuomintang in 1954.[ 6] Six years later, he founded the China Democracy Party with Hsu Shih-hsien and Huang Hua , among others.[ 7] [ 8] Shortly thereafter, Lei was charged with sedition and jailed.[ 9] The charges are widely regarded as having been falsified by the Taiwan government and its then-ruling party the Kuomintang in response to Lei Chen's criticisms.[ 10]
He was released in 1970[ 11] and died on 7 March 1979, aged 82.[ 12] [ 13] He was married to Sung Ying , who had also served on the Control Yuan.[ 14] Lei was posthumously exonerated by the Transitional Justice Commission in May 2019.[ 15] [ 16]
^ Ko, Shu-ling (9 July 2007). "President inaugurates Lei Chen Web site" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ a b "One man's struggle for a nation's freedom" . Taipei Times . Translated by Huang, Francis; Svensson, Perry; Chang, Eddy; Lin, Jackie; Shaw, Grace. 5 September 2002. Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ "Declassified archives show Taiwan's missile project in the '70s" . Taiwan News . Central News Agency. 16 June 2018. Retrieved 17 June 2018 .
^ Mo, Yan-chih (8 March 2012). "Ma apologizes for KMT wrongs, White Terror era" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ Ko, Shu-ling (3 September 2007). "Hsieh launches electronic book on Lei Chen's life" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ Han Cheung (18 March 2018). "Taiwan in Time: Chiang Kai-shek's last challenger" . Retrieved 18 March 2018 .
^ Mo, Yan-chih; Chang, Rich (8 March 2009). "Ma praises Lei Chen for work on democracy" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ Han Cheung (24 June 2018). "Taiwan in Time: A phoenix among dragons" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ Huang, Jewel (4 September 2003). "New books honor Lei Chen" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ Ko, Shu-ling (18 July 2007). "INTERVIEW: Lei Mei-lin says she still bears a grudge" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 2015-09-05 .
^ "A foe of regime released in Taiwan" . New York Times . 13 September 1970. Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ "President Ma opens Lei Chen memorial museum, research center" . Taiwan Today . 8 March 2012. Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ Jacobs, J. Bruce (2012). Democratizing Taiwan . Brill. p. 43. ISBN 9789004221543 .
^ "Military authorities burn Lei Chen Memoirs" (PDF) . Taiwan Communiqué (36): 2. September 1988. Retrieved 24 June 2018 .
^ Wang, Flor; Wang, Cheng-chung (30 May 2019). "Fourth list of exonerations during White Terror era released" . Central News Agency. Retrieved 31 May 2019 .
^ Chen, Yu-fu; Hsiao, Sherry (31 May 2019). "More than 2,000 convictions overturned" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 31 May 2019 .