'Foreign bride' from Cambodia to make history in Taiwan vote
Lin
Li-chan is running for lawmaker in the parliamentary vote -- held
alongside the presidential election -- and is expected to win, making
her the island's first "new immigrant" legislator.
The
term refers to those who came to Taiwan after the first wave of
migration from China post-1949, when the island split from the mainland
following a civil war.
Lin Li-chan poses for photo after a meeting at the Education Ministry in Taipei ©Sam Yeh (AFP)
"It's unbelievable how life turns out."
Now
38 and a Taiwanese citizen, she was set up by her mother with a
Taiwanese husband via a profit-making brokerage at the age of 20.
She
moved from the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh to become one of Taiwan's
tens of thousands of immigrant spouses, mainly from Southeast Asia and
China.
Their vulnerability
has been highlighted by abuse cases in recent years and Lin wants to
draw on her own experiences to improve that.
"My
father had passed away and my mother was struggling financially at that
time. She decided to marry me off and the relatives on my father's side
were angry, thinking she sold me to Taiwan," Lin said.
"'Foreign brides' like us were labelled as products and looked down upon."
Unable to speak a word of Chinese, Lin was wracked with homesickness but determined to adapt.
She picked up the language as she took care of her two children and helped at her husband's small hardware factory.
But when her children doubted she could help with homework because of her Chinese, Lin decided to go to college.
She went on to university and a master's degree before becoming an award-winning campaigner for new immigrants.
"I
took my graduation robe to Cambodia when I went back to sweep my
parents' graves and tell them the good news, and I cried," Lin said.
- Signs of progress -
There were more than half a million foreign spouses in Taiwan in 2015, with many marriages arranged by matchmaking brokerages.
Demand
for the service is partly driven because there are more men than women
of marrying age in Taiwan, and more Taiwanese women are delaying
marriage until later in life.
Taiwan
banned profit-making brokerages in 2009 and allows only
government-authorised organisations to provide international
matchmaking.
The move came
after a string of high-profile abuse cases including one of a Taiwanese
man who enslaved and tortured his Vietnamese ex-wife for seven months.
He was jailed for just four-and-half years.
Campaigners say the situation is improving and the term "foreign bride" is now deemed derogatory. But discrimination remains.
"There
is still negative public perception that the women are bought and they
come to Taiwan to make or con money," said Hong Man-chi, a spokeswoman
of TransAsia Sisters Association, a support group for overseas spouses.
Some
employers offer low wages or demand they work overtime without pay,
Hong says, knowing they are unfamiliar with labour laws.
A number of politicians have also been criticised for making derogatory public remarks about the women.
"Lin's nomination symbolises some progress," adds Lisa Huang, a spokeswoman for Taiwan International Family Association.
"But it remains to be seen whether hers is an isolated case of success or an overall improvement."
Lin
is number four on the list of "at-large" candidates for the ruling
Kuomintang (KMT), seats allocated to a political party based on vote
share.
At-large candidates tend to be political novices with expertise in academia or social advocacy.
With the party expected to win around 10 such seats, she is almost guaranteed a place in parliament.
Looking back, Lin -- who is still with the husband she married at 20 -- says she does not bear any animosity to her mother.
"I was a naive young woman and I didn't think too much about it. I just obeyed my mother's decision."
Now she wants her experiences to make a difference.
"I hope I can do more for new immigrants as a lawmaker," says Lin, who now considers herself Taiwanese.
"I
think I have a mission to come to Taiwan... that a foreign woman who
didn't speak or read a word of Chinese can go this far. I think it's
fated."
Eighteen years ago, Lin Li-chan moved from the
Cambodian capital Phnom Penh to become one of Taiwan's tens of thousands
of immigrant spouses ©Sam Yeh (AFP)
Lin Li-chan (L) speaks with her friend after a meeting at the Education Ministry in Taipei ©Sam Yeh (AFP)
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