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Su Beng (1980), 台灣人四百年史 (Taiwan's 400 Years of History) (in Chinese)Since I am using the internet this is the first time !,Me and some of my friends read about, : Cindy Ng. Wikiquote has quotations related to: Koo Kwang-ming
Retrieved 15 June 2017.īibliography Wikimedia Commons has media related to Koo Kwang-ming.
'PANAMA SWITCHES SIDES: Taipei should forgo ROC framework: ex-premier'.
^ Chen, Wei-han Chin, Jonathan (14 June 2017). 'Scrap ROC, seek global recognition for Taiwan: Koo'. ^ Wang, Chris, Foundation unveils new historical fiction contest, The Taipei Times. ^ Katherine Wei, Koo Kwang-ming to donate half of fortune to Taiwan, The China Post. ^ 'Pro-independence figures top new list of presidential advisors'. Cite uses deprecated parameter |deadurl= (help) 'For Koo, the outsider's role is a natural one'. 2008 DPP leadership bid Īfter Panama ended bilateral relations with Taiwan in June 2017, Koo and Yu Shyi-kun announced that the Tsai Ing-wen administration should renounce the Republic of China and seek international recognition as Taiwan. Koo later served president Chen Shui-bian as an adviser, resigning his post and DPP membership in 2005. Koo joined the Democratic Progressive Party in 1996, when fellow independence activist Peng Ming-min received its presidential nomination. Influential independence activist Su Beng contradicted this assertion, accusing Koo of 'surrendering to the Chiang government'. He replied that he 'had not returned to surrender, but to bring my influence to bear '. Koo accepted, but on landing in Taiwan was upset to see his return described as 'surrender' in an evening newspaper.
The younger Chiang invited Koo to end his exile to 'share in the affairs of the country'. As a consequence he was expelled from the Japanese chapter of WUFI. He met Chiang Ching-kuo, son of ruler Chiang Kai-shek to argue for the lifting of martial law. In 1972, Koo traveled in secret from Japan via Thailand to Taiwan. He left Taiwan for Hong Kong soon after the 228 incident, and later settled in Japan. He became chair of the school's student association, and was actively opposed to the Kuomintang. Koo enrolled at what became National Taiwan University in 1941 to study political science.