Taiwan's Wild Lily student movement (Chinese: 野百合學運; pinyin: Yě Bǎihé xué yùn) or March student movement was a six-day student demonstration in 1990 for democratic reform. The sit-in at Memorial Square in Taipei, initiated by a few students from National Taiwan University, soon drew the participation of over 300,000 demonstrators. The Wild Lily demonstrators sought direct elections of the President of the Republic of China and vice president and ...
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Taiwan's Wild Lily student movement (Chinese: 野百合學運; pinyin: Yě Bǎihé xué yùn) or March student movement was a six-day student demonstration in 1990 for democratic reform. The sit-in at Memorial Square in Taipei, initiated by a few students from National Taiwan University, soon drew the participation of over 300,000 demonstrators. The Wild Lily demonstrators sought direct elections of the President of the Republic of China and vice president and new elections for all representatives in the National Assembly of the Republic of China.
The demonstration lasted from March 16 to March 22, 1990, coinciding with the election of Lee Teng-Hui on March 21 to a six-year term as the President of the Republic of China — an election in which only the 671 members of the National Assembly of the Republic of China voted, one party was recognized, and one candidate ran. This presidential appointment process, characteristic of one-party rule under the Kuomintang and Chiang Kai-shek, was by 1990 widely...
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