Recently, it has been reported that Taipei Palace Museum has 3 cultural relics damaged. Chinese Kuomintang Chairman Zhu Lilun html pointed out when attending the event on the 229th that it is impossible to believe that such a thing will happen. It is simply a world-class joke. This incident also makes all the people have no confidence in the way the preservation of cultural relics in the Palace Museum in Taipei. If the national treasure is handed over to this group of neglected people, who knows which one day will be broken? The ruling party must take responsibility and take responsibility to the end.
Zhu Lilun further pointed out that the DPP authorities had previously proposed to modify the compilation and hierarchy of the Palace Museum in Taipei, which also made people worried that the "government" not only did not take these world-class precious cultural relics seriously, but also did not cherish them.
The island's senior media person Li Yanqiu posted an article on Facebook today, saying that " Wu Micha's job is more important than the emperor's job" that said that the Taipei Palace Museum damaged three national treasures within a year and was also exposed. Dean Wu Micha ordered the concealment of the news, and everyone was banned; public opinion was in an uproar, and the DPP's rule not only fell on the ground, but also loved to "hide and not report" or "seal until death."
Li Yanqiu said sarcastically, "The national treasure actually fell from the workbench and was ruined. After 8 months, the reason and the process could not be explained. This means that before the reasons were compiled and the matter broke out, the matter broke out. Can Wu Micha blame him?" She continued, "Some people questioned that Wu Micha was in charge of the Forbidden City. No wonder he did not cherish the antiques made in China. People below observed the direction of the wind and did not care about the frivolous attitude towards the antiques, which led to successive damages; this statement is purely speculation. Wu Micha was hired by Tsai Ing-wen. A scholar of 'Taiwan independence' manages Chinese cultural relics. It is just right now that something happened, and Tsai Ing-wen might not be unhappy." (Xue Yang/Edited)