#MeToo wave sweeps Taiwan in long-awaited reckoning
Whistle-blower Chen Chien-jou's #MeToo account of harassment sparked a movement in Taiwan, exposing gender inequality and prompting calls for change in the culture of victim-blaming.

TAIPEI, TAIWAN -- Whistle-blower Chen Chien-jou has watched with mixed emotions as Taiwan's #MeToo movement swept from politics and academia to the entertainment world after her account of harassment and subsequent victim-blaming went viral. The 22-year-old former campaign worker wrote in a Facebook post in late May about being groped during a car ride by a TV director hired by her then-employer, the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), for a project last year. When she mustered the courage to tell the party's head of women affairs, Chen said she was treated in a "cold and humiliating" manner and stonewalled by her superior. "I was hit with questions like 'Why didn't you jump out of the van' and 'why didn't you scream'," she told AFP. "I felt I was denied and blamed, and it's a joke (to the superior) who showed no respect for what I felt." Her post instantly went viral, with fellow Taiwanese jumping with their own accounts of workplace harassment. It also ignited a reckoning beyond politics. A prominent activist is under investigation by his university employer, an influential author apologised publicly to a city councillor and celebrities have become embroiled in scandal. Among the cases that came to light was a popular comedian accused of sexually assaulting about 20 women. Prosecutors have opened an investigation. "It's good that the victims can speak out, which takes a lot of courage," Chen said. "But it saddens me to hear these things that should not have happened."











