Tens of thousands of anti-nuclear demonstrators blockaded one of the busiest streets in the capital yesterday, forcing the ruling Kuomintang party to yield and halt construction work at the plant.
This concession by the government led to a large number of demonstrators leaving the area, but hundreds remained, prompting police to use water canon to disperse the crowds today.
Claiming they were attacked, club-waving riot police chased some protesters. The police also carried away some sit-in protesters lying on the ground.
"The demonstrators should protest against the government rather than Taipei citizens. I may take any measures needed to ensure traffic can return normal today."
A Kuomintang spokesman announced Sunday that there would be "no further construction of reactor one -- only safety checks will be done and after that it (reactor one) will be sealed for storage.
"Construction of reactor two will be terminated. In the future, any such commercial operation will be decided by a referendum," he added.
The power station has been one of the most contentious projects in Taiwan.
Intense political wrangling has repeatedly delayed its construction, which began in 1999 and has already cost around USD 10 billion).
Concerns about Taiwan's nuclear power stations have been mounting since 2011, when Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant was hit by a tsunami which knocked out power to its cooling systems and sent reactors into meltdown.
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