February 28 is Peace Memorial Day in Taiwan and rallies have taken place across the country in memory of the victims of the 228 Incident of 1947 that paved the way for 40 years of martial law, known as the White Terror period. Taiwan's president for the majority of that time was Chiang Kai-shek; we take a deeper look at the lasting legacy of perhaps the country's most divisive figure. And the results of a new three-year investigation into the murders of family members of a democracy activist in 1980 show intelligence and government agencies intervened to tamper with evidence. Also:
- The head of Taiwan's National Human Rights Commission, once a prominent dissident, says the country still has some way to go to achieve transitional justice.
- Taiwan's military has proposed legal changes to allow the mobilization of minors aged 16 and over in the event of a national emergency.
- Reporting from Ukraine, TaiwanPlus's Rik Glauert tells us how people in the city of Lviv have dealt with the trauma of war over the past year and also meets the city's mayor.