Chen Ming-tang

Chen Ming-tang (Chinese: 陳明堂; pinyin: Chén Míngtáng) is a Taiwanese politician. He has served as the Administrative Deputy Minister of Justice in the Executive Yuan since 11 March 2013. In September 2013, he briefly became the acting Minister of Justice after incumbent Minister Tseng Yung-fu's sudden resignation.[1][2][3]

Chen Ming-tang
陳明堂
Administrative Deputy Minister of Justice of the Republic of China
Assumed office
30 September 2013
MinisterLuo Ying-shay
DeputyWu Chen-huan
Minister of Justice of the Republic of China (acting)
In office
6 September 2013  29 September 2013
DeputyWu Chen-huan
Preceded byTseng Yung-fu
Succeeded byLuo Ying-shay
Administrative Deputy Minister of Justice of the Republic of China
In office
11 March 2013[1]  6 September 2013
MinisterTseng Yung-fu
DeputyWu Chen-huan
Personal details
NationalityRepublic of China
Alma materSoochow University
Chinese Culture University

ROC Justice Administrative Deputy Ministry

Chen Shui-bian prison transfer

In mid April 2013, Deputy Minister Chen confirmed that former ROC President Chen Shui-bian was transferred from Taipei Veterans General Hospital to Pei-de Hospital in Taichung Prison where he will serve his remaining 20 years of sentence there. Deputy Minister Chen added that this transfer was made to ensure Former President Chen's proper medical attention, in which it was made in consideration of him being prison inmate, patient and a former President.[4][5]

Taiwanese fisherman shooting incident

Responding to the shooting incident of Taiwanese fisherman by Philippine government vessel on 9 May 2013 at the disputed water in South China Sea, in end of May 2013, Chen said that the ROC MOJ has declined Philippine request for bilateral judicial assistance because Manila refusal of handing over the incident video to ROC government, although they have agreed to allow Taiwanese investigators to board the Philippine Coast Guard vessel involved in the shooting incident.[6]

gollark: I know OOP tends to be used more.
gollark: I don't mean evidence of being used, I mean evidence of actually being better.
gollark: Any evidence of that?
gollark: I mean, "preferred by many" I'd accept, but not "objectively superior".
gollark: Suuuuure.

See also

  • Law of the Republic of China

References


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