Monthly Archives: April 2016

Taiwan protests as Kenya cites ‘one China’ policy in deportations

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/04/13
By: Elaine Hou

Taipei, April 13 (CNA) Taiwan issued a strong protest Wednesday after

Foreign Minister David Lin (center) speaks at a legislative hearing on the Kenya case.

Foreign Minister David Lin (center) speaks at a legislative hearing on the Kenya case.

Kenya cited the “one China” policy as grounds for deporting several Taiwanese citizens to China after they were accused of phone fraud.

In a statement, Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) protested against Kenya’s decision to deport the Taiwanese suspects to China and demanded that the African country give a “reasonable explanation” for its actions.

The statement came after international media reports citied the Kenyan government as saying that the fraud suspects were in Kenya illegally and were being sent back to where they had come from.

“We don’t have official relations with Taiwan. We believe in the ‘One China’ policy. We have diplomatic relations with China,” Kenyan Foreign Minister Amina Mohamed was also quoted as saying in a Reuters report.     [FULL  STORY]

Minister’s ‘optimism’ criticized

DEPORTEES FROM KENYA:A People First Party lawmaker accused Andrew Hsia of making a fool of lawmakers, with a Chinese fax saying a visit would be ‘inconvenient’

Taipei Times
Date: Apr 14, 2016
By: Stacy Hsu / Staff reporter

Mainland Affairs Council Minister Andrew Hsia (夏立言) faced criticism at a

Mainland Affairs Council Minister Andrew Hsia speaks at the legislature in Taipei yesterday in response to questions about Taiwanese deported from Kenya to China. Photo: Chen Chih-chu, Taipei Times

Mainland Affairs Council Minister Andrew Hsia speaks at the legislature in Taipei yesterday in response to questions about Taiwanese deported from Kenya to China. Photo: Chen Chih-chu, Taipei Times

legislative committee meeting yesterday over his “over-optimistic” interpretation of a response to the government’s request to visit Taiwanese detained in China following their deportation from Kenya.

At the Internal Administration Committee meeting, several lawmakers asked when the government planned to send officials to China to visit the 45 Taiwanese who were “illegally abducted” by China from Kenya on Friday last week and Tuesday.

Twenty-three of them were acquitted by a Kenyan court on Friday last week in a 2014 telecom fraud case, while the other 22 Taiwanese were among a group of 41 suspects arrested by Kenyan police on the same day.

When answering questions from Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Huang Chao-shun (黃昭順) regarding visiting the detained Taiwanese, Hsia said that China’s Taiwan Affairs Office sent a fax earlier yesterday welcoming such a visit and that the council would endeavor to make the trip possible within the next two or three days.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan “I Believe” video something to be proud of

Editorial
April13, 2016
By: Editor

I have been to Taiwan many times.  I have grown to love the smells, sights and people of Taiwan.  The Taiwanese have a good reason to be proud.  They have developed the most technologically advanced engineering and manufacturing facilities bar none.  Their democracy has developed into the most democratic in all of Asia.  Their human rights policies are a model that other Asian nations would be smart to follow.  The people of Taiwan are the warmest and friendliest people that you will find anywhere.  And did I mention the food?  The food is to die for.

Sadly I don’t meet the immigration qualifications required under Taiwan’s immigration laws. They are almost as stringent as the USA’s.   If I could, I would immigrate to Taiwan in a heartbeat.  If I could die in Taiwan I would truly believe that my life had been truly full.

Lawsuits filed in Kenya case: Lin

‘UNACCEPTABLE’:Minister of Foreign Affairs David Lin refuted remarks by the Kenyan minister of foreign affairs that Taipei had not contacted Nairobi about the deportations

Taipei Times
Date: Apr 14, 2016
By: Stacy Hsu / Staff reporter

Minister of Foreign Affairs David Lin (林永樂) yesterday said that legal

In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, Chinese suspects involved in wire fraud are escorted off a plane upon arriving at the Beijing Capital International Airport in Beijing on Wednesday. The deportation of nearly four dozen Taiwanese that`s part of a larger group including mainland Chinese from Kenya to China where they are being investigated over wire fraud allegations is focusing new attention on Beijingis willingness to assert its sovereignty claim over Taiwan. Photo: AP

In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, Chinese suspects involved in wire fraud are escorted off a plane upon arriving at the Beijing Capital International Airport in Beijing on Wednesday. The deportation of nearly four dozen Taiwanese that`s part of a larger group including mainland Chinese from Kenya to China where they are being investigated over wire fraud allegations is focusing new attention on Beijingis willingness to assert its sovereignty claim over Taiwan. Photo: AP

action had been taken against Kenyan government officials for ignoring a court injunction and cooperating with China in its forced deportation of several Taiwanese last week.
On the sidelines of a meeting of the legislature’s Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee yesterday, Lin said the Taipei Liaison Office in South Africa had instructed the defense attorneys of the first eight Taiwanese forcibly deported to Beijing to take legal action against the Kenyan interior minister, the inspector general of police and the attorney general.

The lawsuits were filed on Friday last week, the day the eight Taiwanese were deported to China following their acquittal in a 2014 telecoms fraud case, Lin said.

Thirty-seven more Taiwanese — 15 of whom were also acquitted in the same case and the others, who were suspected of telecoms fraud and arrested on Friday last week — suffered the same fate on Tuesday, when they were forced by Chinese personnel into an airplane heading to China.     [FULL  STORY]

Township chief in custody on suspicion of murder for love

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-04-13
By: George Liao, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Jhuci Township chief Wang Kun-hung was taken into custody on 6747639Wednesday morning on suspicion of hiring a hitman to kill a policeman, who was said to be Wang’s love enemy.

Chiayi City policeman Lin Chin-chung was shot dead by a man with a shotgun on the night of Jan. 29. After investigation, the police arrested Liu Ray-tang in Tainan City in March on suspicion of being hired to kill the policeman.

During the investigation, prosecutors found that Lin had a close relationship with the township chief’s ex-wife, surnamed Guan. Prosecutors found a nude photo of Guan in Lin’s cell phone.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan makes country’s largest drug haul in history (update)

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/04/13
By: J.K. Liao, Flor Wang and Elaine Hou

Taipei, April 13 (CNA) The Taichung District Prosecutors Office and 41892194Investigation Bureau agents have made the biggest haul of illegal drugs in Taiwan’s history, the Ministry of Justice announced Wednesday.

Along with seizing 263.5 kilograms of ketamine and 1,520 kg of ephedrine with an estimated market value of NT$1 billion (US$30.89 million), the authorities also arrested two suspects surnamed Cheng and Lee.

Speaking at a news conference on the massive bust, Justice Minister Luo Ying-shay (羅瑩雪) lauded the efforts of prosecutors, police and investigators in breaking the case.

Taichung customs officers found a suspicious shipment of goods from China March 31, and suspected that drugs were hidden in a consignment of decorative pandas and mushrooms, as well as cans of car wax. They then reported the case to Taichung prosecutors and police for further investigation.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan deports ‘concrete coffin’ trio

The Standard
April 13, 2016

The main Hong Kong suspect and two others wanted in the “concrete 5_2016041123570315325splash killercoffin” murder case after they fled to Taiwan are expected to be deported today amid unprecedented cooperation.

The arrest of the main suspect, Tsang Cheung-yan, 26, and two other men came after the fourth suspect – Tsang’s 18-year-old girlfriend, named Ho – reported to Taiwan police on Sunday as she feared for her safety.

The case came to light in March when police found the decomposing body of Cheung Man-li, 28, in a cement-filled wooden box in a converted residential unit of an industrial building in Tsuen Wan.

Cheung, who was jobless, had been reported missing earlier last month.

He had been demanding repayment of a HK$1 million debt, which he borrowed from his family for his friends.

Tsang was living in the unit.

Taiwanese police said Ho, whose nickname is “Little Grass,” went to a police station accompanied by a male friend in Taipei on Sunday evening to report a missing passport and her visa expiring. Police questioning led to her revealing her identity and the case being uncovered.     [FULL  STORY]

Kenya police used force to put Taiwanese on plane to China- Taiwan

Citizen Digital
Date: 12 April 2016
By: Reuters

Kenya police used force to put Taiwanese on plane to China- Taiwan
chinese-nationalsKenyan police broke through a police station wall and threw tear gas canisters to force a second group of Taiwanese on to a Chinese plane on Tuesday, Taiwan’s foreign ministry said, in a bizarre diplomatic row in which Taiwan has accused China of abduction.

The Kenyan government and police were not immediately available for comment.

Taiwan on Monday accused China, which regards the self-ruled island as a breakaway province, of kidnapping eight of its nationals, who it said had been acquitted in a cyber crime case in Kenya, and deporting them to China on Friday from the Nairobi district of Kilimani. It said China had pressured Kenyan police to put the eight on the plane.

On Tuesday, another 37 Taiwan nationals were forced on to a Chinese plane, Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry said.

“The 15 locked up at the police station steadfastly refused to be deported (to China),” said Antonio C.S. Chen, the chief of Taiwan’s foreign ministry department in charge of West Asian and African Affairs.

“So police broke through the wall, threw tear gas and then about 10 police entered with assault rifles,” Chen told a news briefing in Taipei.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan Denies Role in Spy Case Involving U.S. Navy Officer

The New York Times
Date: April 12, 2016
By AUSTIN RAMZY

Taiwan’s military denied any involvement on Tuesday in the case of a

Taiwan’s flag flying on one of its warships. In recent decades, the United States has had very few cases that hinted of intelligence activities by Taiwan. Credit Ritchie B. Tongo/European Pressphoto Agency

Taiwan’s flag flying on one of its warships. In recent decades, the United States has had very few cases that hinted of intelligence activities by Taiwan. Credit Ritchie B. Tongo/European Pressphoto Agency

United States naval officer under investigation on suspicion of providing secret information to Taiwan or China.

The Navy is weighing charges of espionage against the officer, a naturalized American citizen born in Taiwan. Investigators believe that the officer, Lt. Cmdr. Edward C. Lin, 39, may have given secret information to a Chinese girlfriend. He is also accused of visiting a prostitute, infidelity, not disclosing foreign travel and lying to investigators.

Maj. Gen. David Lo, a spokesman for Taiwan’s Ministry of Defense, said that American investigators had not contacted Taiwan and that he was unfamiliar with the details of the case. But in a news conference on Tuesday, he denied that Taiwan would have pursued such spying.

“We have absolutely never used or exploited current or former U.S. military personnel to help with any intelligence gathering,” General Lo said.     [FULL  STORY]

Utah LDS missionary hit, killed by car in Taiwan

Fox 13 Salt Lake Cirty
Date: April 12, 2016
By: Ashton Edwards

TAIWAN – The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has confirmed a missionary was hit by a car and killed in Taiwan.

Elder David Hampton, 18, was riding his bike when a car hit him.

He was from North Ogden, Utah.

Elder Hampton’s family sent Fox 13 this statement:

We heard early this morning that our son David, who was serving as a missionary in the Taiwan Taichung mission, had been had been hit by a car while he was riding his bike. He did not survive the accident and we are truly saddened by the event – as can be imagined we are still processing the news. However, we are thankful he was serving the Lord as a missionary. In each of his letters he expressed his pleasure to be on a mission. It was hard work but it was a blessing for him and for us. And we know it will continue to be a blessing for us. He ended every letter with the phrase he was living by – “It is not about you”, and indeed it is not. Our faith is strong that he has been taken home to that God who gave him life. We have a daughter who is still serving as a missionary in the Tahiti mission. We have spoken with her and she has also expressed her gratitude and testimony that David was serving the Lord. At this point we have not decided what she will do.

We are thankful for our family who is with us and appreciate and are strengthened by their love and prayers, and the love and prayers expressed by so many others.
At this point, we do not have any other information about the funeral or when he will be brought home.

– Steve and Cyndi Hampton

[FULL STORY]