A group of opposition "lawmakers" have proposed a vote of no confidence in 
the island's "cabinet" amid growing tensions over a grass-roots campaign to oust 
scandal-plagued "president" Chen Shui-bian. 
 
   "Legislators" of Taiwan's opposition party 
 carry banners and placards calling for Taiwan's "Premier" Su Tseng-chang 
 and "President" Chen Shui-bian to step down at the first "legislative 
 assembly" in Taipei September 19, 2006. 
[Reuters] | 
The move by "legislators" of the Kuomintang (KMT) and People First Party 
(PFP) against "premier" Su Tseng-chang is apparently aimed at giving the 
anti-Chen campaign new impetus. 
The around-the-clock protest led by Shih Ming-teh, a former Chen ally and 
also former chairman of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), entered 
the 11th day yesterday to demand Chen's resignation over a series of 
high-profile corruption scandals. 
The KMT and PFP hold a narrow majority in the 221-member "Legislature," so a 
successful move to withdraw support from Su which would require new 
"legislative" elections is within the opposition's reach. 
However, KMT leader Ma Ying-jeou may be leaning toward proposing a new recall 
initiative against Chen, a process that would require a two-thirds "legislative" 
majority to put the issue to an island-wide referendum. 
A previous recall bid failed in June when members of Chen's party voted 
against it. 
At the "legislature," the opposition "lawmakers" unfurled banners and shouted 
slogans against Chen as a new "legislative" session opened yesterday. 
They temporarily prevented Su, a senior member of Chen's DPP, from speaking 
at the "legislature." 
The "legislators" wore red, the symbol of the anti-Chen campaign, 
representing anger. 
Their protests followed a violent confrontation between Chen's supporters and 
opponents in the southern city of Kaohsiung. 
The clashes, broken up by police early yesterday, were the most serious 
outbreak of violence since the anti-Chen campaign started. 
Late Monday night, violence flared in Kaohsiung when hundreds of Chen 
supporters confronted a group of anti-Chen demonstrators at a downtown plaza. 
Early yesterday, baton-wielding police intervened to separate the groups. At 
least six people, among them two injured, were arrested by police, local 
television images showed. 
Chen has been under pressure to resign since his son-in-law, Chao Chien-ming, 
was detained and indicted on suspicion of insider trading and taking bribes. 
Prosecutors then began looking at whether Chen had misused funds intended for 
"national" affairs and questioned him last month. 
His wife Wu Shu-chen is also under investigation for allegedly accepting 
department store gift certificates in exchange for lobbying efforts. 
Chen has refused to bow to the pressure and says he will remain in office 
until his second four-year term expires in May 2008.