An Unresolved Political Murder in Taiwan — and Why the Silence Endures

Written by Wang Ting-Yu. The author examines Taiwan’s unresolved 1980 Lin family murders as a test case for transitional justice. He argues that decades of sealed political archives, shielded by expansive claims of “national security,” have obstructed accountability and deepened public distrust rooted in the February 28, 1947, massacre. While recent declassifications signal progress, key files remain inaccessible. He contends that democratic reckoning requires full archival disclosure and institutional transparency, warning that without truth, transitional justice risks becoming symbolic rather than substantive.