★金美齢さんへの反撃開始★
投稿者: shinto_kan 投稿日時: 2010/08/19 19:24 投稿番号: [173846 / 230347]
旦那に相談したら、「金美齢のばあさんが嫌がったと思われる投稿を再度書いてやったら」というので、そうします。
★金美齢さんて想像以上にひどい人★
自分の二人の息子さんは日本に帰化したんですってね。
もちろん、台湾の徴兵制度には参加したはずありませんよね。
それなのに、本国韓国の徴兵制度から免除されている在日の方には、軍隊に行かないで何をしているの、とかわめているなんて。
呆れてものが言えません。
いってみれば、金美齢さんて、人間の屑ですよね。
腐りきっています。
★銃弾が送られた件も自作自演との情報も★
Bullet mailed to outspoken Alice King
STAFF WRITER
Saturday, Apr 07, 2001, Page 2
"King is not afraid of bullets."
Alice King, national policy advisor
A bullet placed inside an envelope and addressed to national policy advisor Alice King (金美齡) was found yesterday morning in a mail box at Taiwan Independence Party (TAIP, 建國黨) headquarters in Kaohsiung City, police said.
TAIP officials immediately called the police after they opened the mail yesterday morning. The envelope, which read: "To Alice King," is currently being examined, according to police.
TAIP officials said yesterday that they have received many threatening phone calls after the party decided to invite the Tokyo-based adviser to join its parade to promote Taiwan independence.
The parade is scheduled to take place today in Kaohsiung City.
Meanwhile, King herself yesterday afternoon arrived at CKS International Airport around 4pm and received an enthusiastic welcome from the TAIP as well as members of other pro-Taiwan independence groups.
In response to the threatening mail, King told local media that she was not scared at all and actually felt quite honored about the incident.
"King is not afraid of bullets," she told TAIP officials on the phone right before her departure from Japan yesterday afternoon.
King has become the focus of much controversy recently after she publicly supported Kobayashi Yoshinori (小林善紀), the author of the Japanese comic book On Taiwan (台灣論), who said that Taiwanese comfort women became sex slaves voluntarily.
Moreover, King also commented on former president Lee Teng-hui's (李登輝) plan to visit Japan, saying that Lee is a very important figure in Taiwan, and that the Japanese have no reason to refuse his entry.
There is a 90 percent chance that the Japanese government will approve Lee's visit to Japan, King told local media yesterday.
King is also scheduled to attend a memorial ceremony tomorrow morning for Deng Nan-jung (鄭南榕), an independence advocate who died after setting himself on fire 12 years ago.
以上、36歳の女性より。
★金美齢さんて想像以上にひどい人★
自分の二人の息子さんは日本に帰化したんですってね。
もちろん、台湾の徴兵制度には参加したはずありませんよね。
それなのに、本国韓国の徴兵制度から免除されている在日の方には、軍隊に行かないで何をしているの、とかわめているなんて。
呆れてものが言えません。
いってみれば、金美齢さんて、人間の屑ですよね。
腐りきっています。
★銃弾が送られた件も自作自演との情報も★
Bullet mailed to outspoken Alice King
STAFF WRITER
Saturday, Apr 07, 2001, Page 2
"King is not afraid of bullets."
Alice King, national policy advisor
A bullet placed inside an envelope and addressed to national policy advisor Alice King (金美齡) was found yesterday morning in a mail box at Taiwan Independence Party (TAIP, 建國黨) headquarters in Kaohsiung City, police said.
TAIP officials immediately called the police after they opened the mail yesterday morning. The envelope, which read: "To Alice King," is currently being examined, according to police.
TAIP officials said yesterday that they have received many threatening phone calls after the party decided to invite the Tokyo-based adviser to join its parade to promote Taiwan independence.
The parade is scheduled to take place today in Kaohsiung City.
Meanwhile, King herself yesterday afternoon arrived at CKS International Airport around 4pm and received an enthusiastic welcome from the TAIP as well as members of other pro-Taiwan independence groups.
In response to the threatening mail, King told local media that she was not scared at all and actually felt quite honored about the incident.
"King is not afraid of bullets," she told TAIP officials on the phone right before her departure from Japan yesterday afternoon.
King has become the focus of much controversy recently after she publicly supported Kobayashi Yoshinori (小林善紀), the author of the Japanese comic book On Taiwan (台灣論), who said that Taiwanese comfort women became sex slaves voluntarily.
Moreover, King also commented on former president Lee Teng-hui's (李登輝) plan to visit Japan, saying that Lee is a very important figure in Taiwan, and that the Japanese have no reason to refuse his entry.
There is a 90 percent chance that the Japanese government will approve Lee's visit to Japan, King told local media yesterday.
King is also scheduled to attend a memorial ceremony tomorrow morning for Deng Nan-jung (鄭南榕), an independence advocate who died after setting himself on fire 12 years ago.
以上、36歳の女性より。
固定リンク:https://yarchive.emmanuelc.dix.asia/1143582/ffckdca4h4z9qa4n5doc0a4n9adbel_1/173846.html