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Taiwan's ex-president in custody | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Taiwan's ex-President Chen Shui-bian, who faces corruption allegations, has been formally taken into custody. | |
Mr Chen, an independence activist and staunch critic of China, was taken to jail after his detention was approved by a court overnight. | |
It came at the end of a dramatic 24 hours, during which police led a defiant Mr Chen away in handcuffs. | |
Mr Chen, who stepped down in May, denies all the graft charges and claims they are politically motivated. | |
He has been taken to Tucheng prison in the suburbs of the capital, Taipei. He can now be held for up to four months, despite not yet having formally been charged. | |
Police have reportedly tightened security around the jail amid threats from his supporters. | |
Muscle tear | Muscle tear |
The BBC's Cindy Sui in Taipei says the authorities want to avoid the type of demonstrations seen last week during a landmark visit by a high-ranking Chinese Communist official to Taiwan. | The BBC's Cindy Sui in Taipei says the authorities want to avoid the type of demonstrations seen last week during a landmark visit by a high-ranking Chinese Communist official to Taiwan. |
Mr Chen and his supporters - who see closer ties to Beijing as a threat to Taiwan's sovereignty - opposed that visit. | Mr Chen and his supporters - who see closer ties to Beijing as a threat to Taiwan's sovereignty - opposed that visit. |
Court proceedings had to be suspended on Tuesday night, when Mr Chen said he needed hospital treatment after being pushed outside the court building. | |
He was returned to court for an overnight sitting after doctors found he had only a minor muscle tear. | He was returned to court for an overnight sitting after doctors found he had only a minor muscle tear. |
Mr Chen is accused of money laundering and illegally using a special presidential fund. | Mr Chen is accused of money laundering and illegally using a special presidential fund. |
But the outspoken nationalist accuses the new administration of persecuting him "as a sacrifice to appease China". | |
Mr Chen is an ardent supporter of Taiwanese independence, and a trenchant critic of President Ma Ying-jeou's Kuomintang (KMT) administration, which he accuses of pandering to China. | Mr Chen is an ardent supporter of Taiwanese independence, and a trenchant critic of President Ma Ying-jeou's Kuomintang (KMT) administration, which he accuses of pandering to China. |
But China has termed accusations that his detention is a plot between Beijing and President Ma's administration "pure fabrication". | |
President Ma has also denied intervening in the case. | |
Opposition damaged? | |
Mr Chen and his family have been mired in corruption allegations since 2006, when his son-in-law was charged with insider trading on the stock market and then jailed for seven years. | Mr Chen and his family have been mired in corruption allegations since 2006, when his son-in-law was charged with insider trading on the stock market and then jailed for seven years. |
The charges have damaged the reputation of the main opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), observers say, which may now face a rough ride in next year's local elections. | The charges have damaged the reputation of the main opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), observers say, which may now face a rough ride in next year's local elections. |
Taiwan has been ruled separately since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949. | |
The defeated Kuomintang retreated to Taiwan to create a self-governing entity. | |
But Beijing sees the island as a breakaway province which should be reunified with the mainland, by force if necessary. | But Beijing sees the island as a breakaway province which should be reunified with the mainland, by force if necessary. |