Martial law and strict government censorship of the press were an accepted fact of life. Less than a decade ago (the article was written in 1992), suspended publishing licenses, stiff fines, and even jail sentences awaited those who strayed from the ruling Kuomintang party line.
Martial law ended in 1986, however, and censorship is a thing of the past. Opposition parties are now legal and street protest have become common place. The new atmosphere of freedom is one reason the Taiwanese press, exercising its recently discovered muscles, has been so eager to cover the dismissal of the reporters.
In the case of the laid-off reporters it was not the government enforcing censorship restrictions, but the "marital law mentality " of the ICRT's board of directors, according to one of the laid-off reporters, George Wehrfritz.
In August, the board designated a "committee of four to look into station restructuring and appointed Doc Casey as news director. Casey issued a series of threatening memos, one of which warned of the 'dangerous attitude" of the journalists who "from time to time... are seeking to become martyrs to promote or defend free speech... Once you step outside those boundaries, you're on your own, and believe me you will not only lose my support, but most likely your job as well."
One month after the memo Gould was demoted, and the two reporters Wehfritz and Finkle were fired.