Years after #MeToo first swept the world, Taiwan races to respond

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By Sarah Wu

TAIPEI, July 28 (Reuters) - Six years after the #MeToo movement rose to global prominence and toppled powerful perpetrators of sexual abuse, Taiwan is racing to reform laws and provide training and support as it reckons with its own wave of complaints.

Despite Taiwan's reputation as a progressive bastion in a conservative region - the first place in Asia to legalise same-sex marriage and one of few to have a female leader - it took the spark of a Netflix drama for it to confront a problem long shrouded in shame and silence.

"It is your voices that have pushed our society to have no choice but to take this issue seriously," Lai Pei-hsia, one of the stars of "Wave Makers" told a crowd at a concert in support of the island's movement on a recent sweltering evening.

"Whether as individuals, families, or workplaces, our society has started to deeply reflect and think of ways to prevent the same thing from happening again," said Lai.

The Taiwanese show "Wave Makers" is about the members of an election campaign team, including a supportive manager who convinces a young staffer who was groped that the issue is too important to be swept under the rug.

The drama mirrored reality two months ago when an allegation of sexual abuse surfaced that was linked to Taiwan's ruling party.

Citing a line from "Wave Makers" - "Let's not just let it go, OK?" - Chen Chien-jou took to Facebook in May with her account of abuse close to the heart of government.

Her criticism of the then-head of the Democratic Progressive Party's women's affairs department for dismissing her complaint went viral.

Within days, President Tsai Ing-wen publicly apologised and the party cut ties with the contractor she accused. The man apologised for any "misunderstanding or offence" and said he hoped investigations would reveal the truth.

'NO POWER'

The incident triggered a flood of complaints, unprecedented in a society in which victims of abuse often stay silent due to what experts say is a tradition of victim-blaming, cultural pressure, and unequal power relationships.

A labour ministry survey published in March showed that nearly 80% of women and 85% of men who are sexually harassed in the workplace do not file complaints.

But since Chen's account went public, many victims have come forward and scores of men, entertainers, academics, businessmen and judges among them, have become embroiled in accusations.

Some say the ruling party's quick response to Chen's complaint has encouraged more victims to speak out.