Sunday, February 27, 2011

In response to a sympathetic email concerning human rights issues at National Cheng Kung University

Dear [name omitted],

Thank you for your kind and sympathetic reply and your request for further details. Unfortunately you are an exception. Most of the faculty know of this case very well (see attachments). It started as an illegal dismissal by then chair, Li Chung-hsiung in March 1999. When the "evidence" (i.e. undocumented accusations; I was not even informed of the dismissal action until afterwards!) seemed insufficient a letter was solicited from a former student named Lily Chen (Chen An-chun, still teaching part-time here at FLLD, I think!) who claimed I failed her unfairly 8 years before. The letter was secret and I was allowed to read it only when I took the student to court several years later! (Brace yourself. There's more.)

When I heard her rumor several years after my grade I wrote her a letter offering to find her exam in my office. She ignored my letter; then several years later wrote that secret letter, even though she received three high passes from me. (See attachment for details.)

In December 1999 the university lawyer reversed my dismissal.But that was a tactical maneuver. I assume they wanted to delay as much as possible so I would lose my tourist visa extensions. Anyway, the lawyer now claimed teachers were not protected by the Teachers Law. So my case was returned to the department, but now as an employment issue not a dismissal issue. In effect this nullified the entire appeal process and my appellant rights while maintaining the semblance of appeal. Where in a democracy does a person win an appeal and gain nothing from it?

By the way, the MOE and courts rejected the lawyer's claim and strongly affirmed that foreign teachers are protected by the Teachers Law. In fact an official from Taipei, early in this case, rhetorically asked me, "Since when does a democracy have two sets of laws for people?" Another Taipei official laughed when she heard of Lily's accusation and said, "That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard. How can a student complain about a grade eight years later?" I told her, "I'm glad you have a sense of humor because the people at our university don't see the humor in it."

Now the case is returned to the department for "more evidence." Instead of punishing the people who made false accusations against me, the "prestige" appeal or review committee asks, in effect, for more dirt, but better dirt. This is a democracy!

I finally won on Ministry appeal, January 8, 2001. Now the lawyer claimed foreign faculty have no right to appeal! The lawyer presides over appeal hearings at NCKU then when he loses at MOE he says I have no right to appeal. I assume this lawyer is a member of the Taipei Bar Association. I wrote them several letters and made several phone calls to no effect so far as I know. Of course Taiwan may have different laws! In American law we have the principle of estoppel. That is, the judge will "stop" or disallow a claim that contradicts a previous claim either voiced or implied. This is related to "mend the hold." That is, someone can't go to court dismissing a person for being drunk and then change the argument when they see they're about to lose the case and say the person was really dismissed for being late. Court proceedings, in other words, are principled, based on principles. In American law a university can't implicitly accept the right to appeal by holding appeal hearings then claim later an appellant has no right to appeal, especially after the appellant wins the appeal! It's ridiculous.

All this doesn't even take into account that a university with academic exchanges with US universities would even claim foreigners (i.e. in my case, Americans) have no right to appeal. This is what I will debate American exchange universities, in an American court if necessary.

So the lawyer starts a court action trying to interdict or impede enforcement of the legal Ministry ruling, even though the lawyer attended those hearings in Taipei and never contested my right to appeal during those hearings. Presumably the university wanted to gamble that I would lose the appeal and therefore did not want to publicly claim foreigners had no right to appeal at that time if they could avoid it in a public forum. So they gambled but when they lost the appeal they had no choice. Too many officials were guilty of misconduct and they couldn't risk me returning to the university to demand appropriate penalties, compensation, etc.

But the lawyer lost that case too. The courts said to issue retroactive contracts and enforce reinstatement. However NCKU's former president, Kao Chiang had other plans in defiance of both court and Ministry rulings. Despite the court rulings and despite the MOE Appeal Ruling and despite 8 warning letters issued by the MOE (see attached), Mr. Kao decided he, or at least the university administration, was a law unto itself; not in the sense intended by St. Paul in the New Testament, i.e. obeying a higher law, but in the sense of not obeying any law or ethical norms that most of us subscribe to: fair play, common sense, ethical principles, legal rulings, reciprocity, the Golden Rule (enunciated in both Christian and Confucian texts), etc. It's like a child knocking over the chess pieces when his opponent gains an advantage in the game.

I should add that no NCKU president has acted on this case; each one delegates the case to another official, presumably on the surmise that no one can be held accountable. I'd like them to try that at an American university. In American law, as President Truman's motto put it, "the buck stops" at the head official no matter how many delegates he has under him.

For example, the current president responded to the case when Dr. Lai was president, but now that Dr. Hwung is president he delegated the case to another official (out of respect I omit his name). So this is musical chairs, only NCKU is one of the highest-ranked universities in Taiwan, and it's not musical and it's not chairs, it's careers. The career of an American professor is at stake here; if the university learns this too late it's going to cost the university a plummet in its international ranking and, if American law is on my side, as I think it is, academic exchanges and the money and prestige that go with it.

Finally, after nearly two and a half years and two letters from the New York-based human rights group, SCHOLARS AT RISK (to whom Mr. Kao wrote, "Don't worry: we're following laws" or something to that effect), Mr. Kao finally gave in and issued the contracts followed by automatic reinstatement.

But officials had a new trick up their sleeve. (You see, people here don't like to lose. The problem is I don't like to lose either; and I've got the winning facts on my side.)

Now, despite the fact that I won the appeal, they wanted to review me again. Perhaps I was just curious, or perhaps I was encouraged to do so by a respectable colleague, but I actually attended one of those hearings, then promptly walked out when I discovered they had no interest in the Ministry ruling. One committee member actually got irate over some of my comments to that effect. She should be grateful I did not wish to embarrass that respectable colleague I referred to above or I would have responded in a manner more appropriate to the occasion.

In sum, ignoring the Ministry ruling, subsequent university committees ruled that I should be denied promotion and increments for six years. That too was overruled by the Ministry of Education.

So you see our so-called prestige committees were overruled on every issue. One prestige committee, chaired by one Lee Chian-er, former dean and presidential hopeful, circulated that secret letter from Lily Chen and though I asked three times to learn what was in that letter he ignored me three times. One courageous woman, a member of the Teachers Union, defied the chair and summed up the contents of the letter.

Anyway, I think that sums up the case. You say I should inform the rest of the faculty. But most of them know the case by now, as the attachments, which I've emailed the faculty previously, prove. A lot of our faculty matriculated and received accreditation at universities in America, England, and other established democracies where they were protected by principles of law and human rights. Some of them publish vocal attacks on Mainland China's poor human rights record. I contacted one such professor last year. He had published a strong attack on the lack of human rights in Mainland China so naturally I thought he would be sympathetic to the lack of human rights here. He never replied. 

As for the people who signed that letter defending Lily Chen's unproved accusations, one claimed not to remember signing it. Another claimed he only meant he knew Lily more than he knew me. Even if one accepts that inane defense, is that a principle of justice? Do I make judicial decisions based on how long I know someone or on the facts along with principles of law (i.e. no proof favors the accused not the accuser or every teacher would be liable to the same treatment, including the signatory of that letter)? But in this culture of relationships the signatory probably assumed, due to his relationships, such an insult could not happen to him. That's no way to govern a university; that's no way to live one's life; as he'll find out when he comes to the end of it, as Thoreau phrased it.

Is there due process of law at NCKU? Are there principles of justice? Are there reputable review and appeal committees? I'll let you answer that question based on the facts rehearsed in this letter.

I appreciate your personal response. In nearly twelve years that I've periodically emailed such letters, not a single faculty member has responded. Two, including yourself, responded this time. Perhaps that's progress. And I wouldn't dismiss two either, exponentially, which can quickly lead to 4, then 16, and 256, etc. It's the same math that established the Declaration of Independence.

Cordially,

Richard de Canio

Friday, February 25, 2011

Regarding Human Rights Abuses at National Cheng Kung University

Dr. Hwung-Hweng Hwung
President
National Cheng Kung University
Tainan, Taiwan

bcc: Concerned parties

25 February 2011

Dear President Hwung,

On consideration of recent events, including a meeting with the new Secretary-General, I must say that I am dissatisfied with the dilatory handling of a case that has lasted twelve years and where the facts are transparent, including serious human rights violations and the university's stubbornly defiant refusal to be accountable for them.

Please understand, this case is a serious violation of human rights. To pretend otherwise is not an option. The marginal way it's being handled only adds insult to injury. Forcing an American professor to continually petition for remedy is unacceptable.

After nearly twelve years I should not have had to contact the new administration about this case. The new administration should have considered the case serious enough to have contacted me, especially since I contacted the current president last year when he was Secretary-General, who then assigns the current Secretary-General to discuss the case. Hoping the case disappears through such dilatory maneuvers is not the way a reputable academic institution should handle a human rights case of this magnitude.

In sum, in 1999 I was illegally dismissed. The university circulated a secret malicious letter from a former student who had no proof whatsoever about a grade eight years before. This letter was solicited. It was circulated at all subsequent hearings, including appeal and review.

The university stubbornly ignored urgent warnings by members of its Teachers Union that the entire dismissal process was illegal, since it was based on malicious and unproved accusations. A lawyer, presumably a member of Taiwan's Bar Association, presided over some of these hearings, despite conflict of interest. When the dismissal action is canceled on appeal in December 1999 the lawyer then returns the case back to the department, now as an employment, not a dismissal matter, on the basis that foreigners are not protected by the Teachers Law. To make matters worse, once I won the case in a Ministry of Education Appeal ruling dated 8 January 2001, the lawyer then argued that a foreigner I had no right to appeal.

How can the same lawyer who presided over a university appeal then argue I had no right to appeal? Don't you see the duplicity here? I'm curious how Tainan citizens would react if we treated a Taiwan appellant the same way.

Finally, the university refused to honor the Ministry ruling for nearly two and a half years. In the process of contesting my rights the university also insulted all American professors, indeed all foreign professors, by saying that we were not protected by the same rights as Taiwan citizens, even though Taiwan citizens expect to be protected by equal rights when they matriculate or teach at American universities or at other universities in democracies abroad. Moreover, even as they are outraged at the mere possibility of a slight to a Taiwan citizen, such as in the recent taekwondo incident where most of the country, including the media, was incensed by a perceived insult to a Taiwan citizen. Yet except for a few articles in Chinese newspapers, the Taiwan press and human rights groups have been silent about my case.

I have deep respect for that superb Taiwan athlete, but as an American citizen I am outraged at the double standard shown compared to the university's response in my case, especially considering that those involved in violating my rights or retarding remedy for those abuses, including the current administration, are highly educated, many of them from universities in my own country.

I hope you understand that, as in the case of the taekwondo incident, my case is not just about me. It's about respect accorded American citizens in Taiwan. As an American citizen it is my responsibility to insure fair treatment of American professors here. I cannot and will not compromise on the matter of a complete administrative resolution of this case, including my right to face the student who accused me (so far as I know she is still teaching part time at our university); my right to receive formal apologies from those who discredited me by their illegal and malicious actions; and compensatory and punitive administrative actions insured by human rights charters recently endorsed by Taiwan's president.

The notion that an American professor must repeatedly, for twelve years, petition a university administration for such closure is unacceptable, especially for a university with numerous academic exchanges with American universities and other universities in established democracies.

Please understand, one more time, that I am committed to a fair and full remedy in this case and I will continue to use all legal options guaranteed under Taiwan law, international human rights charters, and laws that govern academic exchanges of American universities with universities abroad.

This is not an issue that requires dilatory review. The facts are plain and transparent. There is no dispute that a secret letter was circulated to insure my dismissal. There is no dispute the university refused to enforce a legal Ministry ruling for nearly two and a half years. There is no dispute the university claimed foreign faculty were not protected by the Teachers Law. There is no dispute the same lawyer who presided over university appeal hearings then claimed in court that foreign faculty had no right to appeal! The claim that foreigners had no right to appeal in itself should discredit the university. The fact that it was made after the university itself held appeal hearings only underscores the shameless duplicity of the university in its treatment of foreign, specifically American, faculty.

I urge you once more to consider the gravity of the issues and my commitment to insure a full, fair, and formal resolution of them. The time for prudent delay should have been at the beginning of the illegal dismissal action in 1999, not now when remedy is urgent by  international standards of rights and laws. It took sixteen days to pass my dismissal but nearly twelve years to deny remedy it. It seems to me  reasonable that if the university can illegally dismiss someone in sixteen days it can, and should, legally remedy that action in the same amount of time.


Sincerely,

Richard de Canio
Formerly Associate Professor
Department of Foreign Languages and Literature
National Cheng Kung University
Tainan, Taiwan.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Fwd: Regarding an academic issue



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Richard John <rdca25@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, Jan 2, 2011 at 11:28 PM
Subject: Regarding an academic issue
To: 015130@mail.fju.edu.tw


Father Daniel J. Bauer
Department of English Language and Literature
Fu Jen Catholic University
Hsin-Chuang, 242
Taiwan, R.O.C.

January 2, 2011

Dear Father Bauer,

I'm curious if you have any interest in a human rights issue at National Cheng Kung University, in Tainan, or if you have any useful advice pertaining to the matter.

In 1999, a defamatory letter against me was secretly circulated to insure an illegal dismissal started in the Department of Foreign Languages. When that dismissal was canceled in December 1999, the university claimed foreign teachers were not protected by the Teachers Law and the dismissal case was now handled as an employment case! In other words, since I could not be legally fired, they now questioned whether I should be hired, which, apart from semantics, insured my dismissal anyway!

When the Ministry of Education ruled against the university, the university  filed a lawsuit to contest foreigners' right to appeal, though the university had held its own appeal hearings and attended those in Taipei! When it lost this case too, it appealed and then used the pending appeal as a tactic to delay reinstatement.

After eight warning letters from the Ministry of Education (transcript attached), and two exploratory letters from Scholars at Risk, an international human rights group based in New York that asked why I was not reinstated if I won an appeal, the university finally complied with the Ministry ruling in May 2003, nearly two and a half years after the ruling (January 8, 2001).

I find it curious that the mere appearance of disrespect to a Taiwanese taekwondo athlete could cause such an uproar here but a clearly documented case of disrespect to an American professor is tolerated. I wonder if NCKU president, Michael Ming-Chiao Lai, can explain the difference.

To this day, despite repeated requests by me and colleagues, he has ignored my request for a formal apology, despite the fact that Taiwan has recently endorsed international human rights principles.

Neither the university nor university officials involved in this case have received penalties, which encourages future actions of this kind, not only against foreigners but even against Taiwanese citizens.

No English-language newspaper, to my knowledge, has published any of my letters regarding this case, though at least two Chinese newspapers have exposed the case (see attachment for a recent item).

I know you write weekly comments for The China Post. I'm curious if you can explore this case in one of your columns or if you have any other advice to give me. I don't think it's right that a university, especially a high-ranked university, be allowed to ignore human rights principles like this. We treat Taiwan professors and students fairly in the United States, where they receive the full protection of American laws and rights. Even apart from laws and human rights, Taiwanese should show mutual respect to our teachers and students. That is a principle of both Confucian and Christian ethics.

I would appreciate a response to this letter. Thank you.


Sincerely,

Richard de Canio
Formerly Associate Professor
Department of Foreign Languages and Literature
National Cheng Kung University
Tainan, Taiwan
(06) 237 8626

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Re: A formal apology for human rights violations committed at National Cheng Kung University

Michael Ming-Chiao Lai
President
National Cheng Kung University
Tainan, Taiwan


November 28, 2010

Dear President Lai,

The recent ping pong edits on Wikipedia on the National Cheng Kung University (NCKU) page concerning my entry on Human Rights violations at National Cheng Kung University is, apart from other recognized reasons, a case in point of the necessity for NCKU to formally apologize for human rights violations the university committed at this university at least beginning in 1999 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Cheng_Kung_University). Remarkably, despite sourcing of Taiwan court and Ministry of Education formal decisions, linked to my Wikipedia entry on the NCKU page, as recently as today my sources were challenged and the human rights violations committed by NCKU officials were called "allegations" instead of facts.

An allegation is, by definition, an accusation that has not yet been verified either empirically or juridically as a fact. Few things on our planet can be empirically verified as "facts," and some still question evolution or the authorship of Shakespeare's plays. But in a democracy we do agree on one thing: namely juridical decisions, at least pending appeal, in cases where appeal is still possible.

Now my illegal dismissal was declared illegal by both Taiwan's Ministry of Education as well as by Taiwan's courts. This, in a democracy, is as much juridical closure as it's possible to get. To challenge even judicial decisions, especially in the case of my dismissal where illegal procedures were fairly blatant and self-evident, is obstinacy.

I find it disheartening that Taiwan citizens would start an immediate protest over the apparent injustice suffered by a Taiwan citizen, Ms. Yang Shu-chun, even advocating a boycott of South Korean goods, and going so far as to throw eggs at a South Korean school in Taipei and yet greet my case, proved beyond a reasonable doubt, with indifference. Of course, I am entirely sympathetic with Ms. Yang, and, beyond her, to the dignity of Taiwan, if indeed Ms. Yang was treated unjustly or even negligently. But bear in mind, technically (that is, juridically) accusations of injustice against Ms. Yang are still allegations, until a final and formal ruling is made; and even that ruling may be challenged. The point is that merely on the appearance of injustice against a Taiwan citizen, Ms. Yang's fellow citizens took to the streets and insured their vocal protest would be heard.

But there's no mere appearance of injustice against me; it's a fact by reasonable juridical standards (i.e official rulings by Taiwan's court and Ministry of Education). Yet NCKU officials continue to refuse to issue a formal apology or compensation or even admit wrongdoing. Apparently, in a revisionist purge of my case, no injustice ever happened.

Now so long as NCKU continues its policy of refusing to admit human rights violations, apologize for them, and compensate for them, edits such as happened today on Wikipedia when my human rights entry on the National Cheng Kung University page was removed (though I have since reverted it) will continue to occur. Perhaps Americans should respond to my illegal dismissal the way that Taiwanese responded to the apparent injustice suffered by Ms. Yang at the Taekwondo Olympics in South Korea: make vocal protests against Taiwan, advocate a boycott of Taiwan goods, and insure termination of American academic exchanges with all Taiwan universities.

Apart from the human rights issues involved, I cannot accept the disrespect I have been shown as an American professor by official indifference over the human rights that were violated in my case. Apparently you have the time for photo shoots with students to advertise NCKU as an academic institution but don't have the time to respond to a serious issue of human rights violations that, if one includes the need for a formal apology and compensation as guaranteed by international human rights charters, has lasted for eleven years!

Once again I urge American universities that maintain academic exchanges with National Cheng Kung University in Tainan to review their bylaws and other relevant laws that might interdict such exchanges based on proved human rights violations. I have already sent necessary documentation, in both Chinese and English, including official Taiwan court and Ministry rulings and these are also available on my human rights blog (http://rdca45.blogspot.com/) and linked on the Wikipedia page for National Cheng Kung University, since I "reverted" the deleted entry as of today.

I encourage you once again to take human rights principles seriously at National Cheng Kung University; to abide by international human rights charters that your president recently formally endorsed; to abide by principles of reciprocity that insures fair and equal treatment of Taiwan students and faculty in the US; and to govern the university by reasonable standards of law and human rights.

Sincerely,

Richard de Canio
formerly Department of Foreign Languages and Literature
National Cheng Kung University
Tainan, Taiwan

Wikipedia Edit, 28 November 2010

Dear Jac,
Will you please explain why my Human Rights entry on the National Cheng Kung University page was removed for being "poorly sourced"? I don't understand. It's been on for weeks now. It's completely sourced, in both Chinese and English, with official court and Ministry of Education documents. Your removal came on the same day when an editor pushed my human rights entry further down the page with this comment:

(cur | prev) 00:37, 28 November 2010 128.232.134.168 (talk) (8,868 bytes) (Moved "Human rights record" section further down the page becuase it seems less important than much of the other content, and of less interest to the general reader.) (undo)

I commented on his Talk Page:

User talk:128.232.134.168
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Re: your comment: (Moved "Human rights record" section further down the page becuase it seems less important than much of the other content, and of less interest to the general reader.)

I don't understand your point of view: what is more important than human rights, especially for a university, which can only stand on moral integrity and human rights. Without human rights on what basis can a university stand: Without the insurance of human rights, how can a university insure the integrity of grading, of the curriculum, of academic promotion? That's why tenure was established at many universities in the first place. Do you really think human rights is of lesser importance than how many colleges there are at a university? Human rights may not be of primary importance in Mainland China, but it should certainly be of primary importance at a university in Taiwan, which calls itself a democracy and which has only recently formally endorsed international human rights charters. --Cincinattus (talk) 03:01, 28 November 2010 (UTC)

Your comment was:

(cur | prev) 00:58, 28 November 2010 Jac16888 (talk | contribs) (7,237 bytes) (→Human Rights Record: rm poorly sourced allegations) (undo)

But how can these be "poorly sourced allegations"? They're not even "allegations" in the stric legal sense of that word. A person "allegedly" committed a crime until he's convicted; then it's legally justified to say that person committed that crime. An allegation is an accusation that has not been verified. But both court and Ministry of Education documents have fully verified my statement, which therefore cannot be called mere "allegations."

If these were indeed "allegations" they would have been removed immediately as soon as I posted them, but they were not, once I "sourced" the claims with legal documents (and if court and Ministry of Education rulings and letters are not "legal" then I don't understand what currency the word "legal" has on Wikipedia. Why was my entry left on for seeks after I "sourced" it then removed on the same day that user 128.232.134.168 thought legal rights "less important" and of "less interest"? First, human rights are of primary importance to a university, or at least should be. If 128.232.134.168 thinks otherwise, he or she has a right to that opinion; but I doubt it would be shared by most academics. And I'm not sure if a university should establish itself on what's interesting or uninteresting. I think a university should establish itself on what's just or unjust. The recent incident regarding Ms. Yang Shun-chun shows how sensitive the issue of injustice can be in Taiwan, or does the issue of justice just pertain to Taiwanese and not to foreigners?

But evidently the agenda of 128.232.134.168 is different from mine, so I'll address the main issue here to you. Please Jac, explain to me what you mean by "unsourced" and why this claim was made only now and not before when the sourcing has not changed since it was first entered no later than November 7, 2010. Thanks for your consideration, Jac.
--~~~~

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Advisory on Academic Exchanges with National Cheng Kung University

Dear University Administration,

I assume you currently maintain academic exchanges with National Cheng Kung University in Tainan, Taiwan. In view of documented human rights abuses over more than ten years at that university (see the Wikipedia English-language entry for National Cheng Kung University at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Cheng_Kung_University), unresolved to the present day, your university may wish to reconsider academic exchanges with this university, or even if continued exchanges with this university might violate ethical principles or laws, statutes, or bylaws of your university administration or the regional accreditation institute.

Certainly continued exchanges with a university that defies basic principles of human rights is not in the best interests of a university. Additionally if human rights violations are tolerated here then on what consistent basis can a university terminate exchanges with another university that also violates human rights?

In 1999, a defamatory letter was secretly circulated at several "oversight" committees to insure an illegal dismissal started in the Department of Foreign Languages. Presumably NCKU "oversight" committees were determined to exculpate their colleagues rather than protect the rights of the appellant.

After that dismissal was canceled in December 1999, the university claimed foreign teachers were not protected by the Teachers Law (patently false, as Wikipedia links show), so the case was now punitively treated as a pending hiring action instead of a canceled dismissal action, jeopardizing the teacher's employment on a new basis. This violates the principle of appeal, namely that one benefits from a favorable ruling, or why appeal?

The university subsequently held "appeal" and "review" hearings at which the secret letter was circulated, and attended hearings at the Ministry of Education. When it lost the case, it then claimed foreigners had no right to appeal!

At least in US law the legal principle of estoppel prevents such duplicity, where a legal claim contradicts a previously established legal agreement (namely, my right to appeal, or why would the university hold appeal hearings and attend them in Taipei?).

Whether estoppel is observed under Taiwan law is beside the point. The university's action violated  the basic principles of honesty and good faith. Grade school kids ("sore losers") are expected to act like this, but not university officials! If the university violates these basic principles of fair play how can it expect its students to abide by them? Or how, on that basis, can it expect to maintain academic exchanges with universities in democracies abroad?

When the university could not win at the Ministry level it then filed a lawsuit! When it lost the lawsuit it then appealed and delayed enforcing the Ministry ruling in the meantime, using the pending court appeal as a new tactic to deny retroactive contracts and reinstatement.

In fact two NCKU officials tried to intimidate me saying the university would delay the case indefinitely in the courts unless I resigned! This is AFTER I won a legal Ministry ruling based on hearings university officials attended and never contested! Apart from obvious ethical principles, this violates another legal principle of US law, that a party cannot make a claim it failed to make at the appropriate time.

After eight warning letters from the Ministry of Education (see my Human Rights blog at http://rdca45.blogspot.com/), the university finally complied with the Ministry ruling dated 8 January 2001 in May 2003, nearly two and a half years later! Scholars at Risk, an international human rights group now based in New York, also sent two letters.

Presumably the university thinks it's a law unto itself. This is okay if you follow higher laws (Jesus, Buddah, Confucius, Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr.) but not if you ignore them. And I see no rational excuse for ignoring the constitutional laws of one's own country, assuming they don't violate higher principles (equality under the law, basic freedoms of speech, religion, assembly, etc.). Moreover, these are laws university officials never contested until they lost the case.

Sincerely,

Richard de Canio
Formerly Associate Professor
Department of Foreign Languages and Literature
National Cheng Kung University
Tainan, Taiwan

A Public Letter Exposing Official Dereliction at National Cheng Kung Univeristy, under the administration of Michael Ming-Chiao Lai

November 11, 2010

The goal of this public letter about an illegal dismissal at National Cheng Kung University is to remind officials there that they are civil servants and, as such, are bound by law to carry out their duties, whether they find it expedient to obey the law or not. That's what "executive" means, "to execute" the laws, including those of the university and of the nation.

There's no dispute the law is on my side. The court ruling said so. The Ministry of Education ruling said so.

No matter that former university president, Kao Chiang, defied that ruling for nearly two and a half years. No matter that recently someone tried to revert the Wikipedia entry on this human rights scandal with the words, "If true, a travesty, but no evidence or specifics provided. Also, sadly, it is a fact that at the time the alleged incident occured, foreign faculty were not protected by the Teachers Law of the ROC."

Both of these claims are false, as Wikipedia sources now prove. This is no "alleged incident," it's a "fact." And what the writer claims, in his revisionist apologetics, was not a fact (that "foreign faculty were not protected by the Teachers Law of the ROC") was indisputably a fact: teachers were protected by the "Teachers Law of the ROC," as both Ministry and court rulings, both linked to the Wikepedia entry, prove.

Therefore, by this writer's own words, the human rights violations over the last ten years were indeed a "travesty" of justice and they will tarnish the reputation of National Cheng Kung University for years to come. Moreover, this is due to the lack of oversight at our university.

If our university committees had stopped this dismissal from the beginning, in the first College review, this scandal could have been aborted. But none of these officials lived up to their responsibility as custodians of the university's moral (and ultimately academic) reputation. Indeed, they sacrificed that reputation for their own selfish interests, indolent ignorance, or timid conformity.

In sum, the university effected an illegal dismissal in 1999. The salient facts are included on the National Cheng Kung University page of the English Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Cheng_Kung_University). For more than ten years university officials have refused to enforce remedy of those violations at this university. The current president, Michael Ming-Chiao Lai, has not even deigned to see me once, though he's been president nearly four years.

Only this week President Lai assigned a vice-president (and president-elect) to talk to a member of the Teacher's Union about the case. In other words, after ten years, Dr. Lai still doesn't think this issue is important enough to talk to the plaintiff personally! Not that talk, at this late stage, would make a difference, but at least it would show minimal courtesy.

The president of the United States, with the whole world on his shoulders, will talk to the common people in a local dispute that happened thousands of miles from the White House; but the president of this university does not have the time to talk to his own colleague, indeed his senior colleague, about grievous human rights issues for which university officials are fully responsible.

Even as recently as today I was informed by Dr. Lai's office that he was busy with the university's anniversary, with no invitation to a meeting next week (unless the anniversary lasts the entire academic year)! This is typical of the dilatory tactics and disrespect NCKU officials have shown.

I have seen photos on the official NCKU web page of Dr. Lai with foreign students who elect to study at NCKU. He can find the time for these students, presumably to inflate the reputation of the university, but then he ignores human rights issues that he is bound, both by law and now by international law (President Ma recently signed international human rights charters) to enforce; and which, in the long term, will inflate or deflate the university's reputation far more decisively than a mere student testimonial that he chose to study at NCKU!

Even when subordinate officials deign to see me or a colleague about the issue, they use the usual "gathering the facts" tactic, a gambit that has been overplayed for ten years. If these officials don't know the facts of a serious human rights issue then they should be dismissed from office.

Don't officials at NCKU do their homework? As a student I would never visit a professor unless I had fully mastered the material and needed only to gloss a word, phrase, or sentence properly so we could engage in intelligent dialogue based on a shared knowledge.

Yet these officials invariably start every meeting with yet another review of the facts. Some studiously scribble on a pad to look responsive. But if they were responsive there wouldn't have to be a meeting at all; they would have acted on the facts they should have known.

Presumably these officials believe, though they are paid by taxpayers, they are accountable only to their colleagues. After all, they don't bump shoulders with the taxpayer daily, but with their colleagues, whom they have to please, not the taxpayers, which means, in the long run, not the law.

Thus a culture of arrogance has developed at National Cheng Kung University that the public should be aware of and that should not be tolerated if the public takes pride in its young, and still formative, democracy. If even high-ranked academic institutions in Taiwan lack moral probity or integrity, then there's less hope for democracy in Taiwan.

Public officials here must be given the message loud and clear: they are public servants, not public masters. Hence the phrase "civil servants," not "civil masters." They are servants because, presumably, they serve the people and the law that ideally protects the people. If Dr. Lai does not understand this he should be summarily removed from office. If he is not removed from office, or does not have the decency to resign, I shall continue to expose this case internationally anyway, which will further compromise the reputation of National Cheng Kung University. Yet my goal is not to compromise the reputation of the university; my goal is to protect my reputation and the reputation of American professors who come after me. I will not compromise that goal.

One thing I insure all parties involved: This case will be resolved according to the principles of law and of international law. The sooner this goal is achieved the better it will be for all parties involved.

Sincerely,

Richard de Canio
Formerly, Dept. of Foreign Languages and Literature
National Cheng Kung University
Tainan, Taiwan