Taiwan ex-leader Ma found not guilty in leaks case
A Taiwanese court today found former president Ma Ying-jeou not guilty in a political leaks case, one of a series of lawsuits brought against him since he stepped down last year.
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Taipei: A Taiwanese court today found former president Ma Ying-jeou not guilty in a political leaks case, one of a series of lawsuits brought against him since he stepped down last year.
Ma was acquitted of leaking secrets and of defamation. He will face a new trial after state prosecutors brought fresh leaks charges against him earlier this month.
"Defendant Ma Ying-jeou is found not guilty" of violating the Communication Security and Surveillance Act and the Personal Information Protection Act, said Judge Wu Yung-yi.
Ma was not present when the verdict was announced. Throughout the trial he had denied any wrongdoing.
Today's case, which had been filed by lawmaker Ker Chien-ming, accused Ma of asking the then-prosecutor-general to leak information to him about a confidential judicial probe in 2013.
Ma was also accused of defamation by implying that the lawmaker had sought to influence a court case which he (Ker) was facing.
The judicial probe was investigating whether the parliamentary speaker at the time, a political rival of Ma, had improperly influenced the case against Ker in an attempt to benefit the lawmaker.
While still in office Ma had immunity from prosecution. But since he stepped down in May last year after serving the maximum two terms, the 66-year-old has been hit with a series of corruption and other allegations.
Ma's Beijing-friendly Kuomintang (KMT) party held power from 2008 to 2016, before it was trounced by Tsai Ing-wen and her opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).
The KMT hailed today's ruling and urged lawmaker Ker not to appeal the case to avoid "political name-smearing and wasting judicial resources".
But Ker's lawyer Zan Keng-goan expressed shock at the verdict and vowed to appeal.
The leaks controversy sparked a political storm in 2013 and saw two top officials resign, while thousands of protesters took to the streets to demand Ma's resignation.
The DPP, then in opposition, compared the probe to the Watergate scandal in the United States, as information allegedly implicating the parliamentary speaker was obtained by a wiretap on lawmaker Ker's phone.
Ma won the presidency in 2008 with the biggest landslide in Taiwan's democratic history, as voters registered disgust at the graft scandals of his predecessor Chen Shui-bian of the DPP.
Chen was indicted after leaving office and had been serving a 20-year sentence for corruption until he was freed on medical parole in 2015.
However, Ma's popularity plummeted during his eight years in power, with public disquiet at policies seen as linking the island too closely to China and benefiting big business rather than ordinary people.
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