Taiwan Lawmakers Brawl Over Military Pension Cuts
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2018-04-20 HKT 15:21
Taiwan legislators brawled in parliament on Friday over proposed reductions to military veterans' pensions, part of wider cutbacks that have triggered mass protests.
The clashes came as a draft bill proposed by the cabinet earlier this month was deliberated in parliament for the first time, following a protest by military retirees in February.
That demonstration ended in tragedy as a former colonel fell while climbing up a wall, and later died in hospital.
Legislators shouted, pushed and shoved in the chamber on Friday, with lawmakers from the opposition Kuomintang (KMT) waving placards demanding President Tsai Ing-wen apologise to the veterans.
They threw signs emblazoned with the words "bully government", jumping on tables and tussling with legislators from Tsai's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).
KMT lawmakers also called for DPP legislator Tuan Yi-kang to apologise for calling high-ranking veterans protesting the reforms as "insatiably greedy".
The backlash over the cuts is a major challenge for president Tsai, who has seen her popularity rating fall since her election two years ago.
Legislators passed a separate pension reform bill last June that targeted civil servants, as the government warned it could no longer pay out on the high-interest deals. (AFP)
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