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Overseas Taiwanese urged to further New Southbound Policy

Radio Taiwan International 
Date: 15 March, 2019
By: Paula Chao

President Tsai (right) met with members of an overseas Taiwanese community in Taipei. (CNA photo)

President Tsai Ing-wen has called on overseas Taiwanese communities to further Taiwan’s New Southbound Policy. Tsai was speaking Friday while meeting with representatives of a group based in Asia.

The New Southbound Policy seeks closer ties with Southeast Asia, South Asia, Australia, and New Zealand. It has been a centerpiece of Tsai’s foreign affairs agenda since she took office in 2016.

Tsai talked about the importance of the policy and what the overseas community can do to help Taiwan.

“The New Southbound policy aims to strengthen exchanges and build stronger partnerships between Taiwan and countries in the Indo-Pacific through cooperation in the areas of talent development, education, culture, and tourism. As you have established a long-term base overseas and have cultivated extensive connections, we hope to rely on you to help the government open dialogues with ASEAN and South Asian countries while continuing to create regional development and prosperity,” said Tsai.     [FULL  STORY]

US Human Rights Report Flags Exploitation of Taiwan’s Migrant Workers

The report was released just after a protest against increased work hours for fishermen.

The News Lens
Date: 2019/03/15
By: Nick Aspinwall

Credit: Reuters / TPG

Taiwan’s foreign workers remain vulnerable to “exploitation” and “significant debt burdens” and its Ministry of Labor has decreased its inspections of employers, according to a human rights reportreleased on Wednesday by the U.S. State Department.

The 2018 U.S. Country Report on Human Rights Practices for Taiwan also flags the “mistreatment and poor working conditions for foreign fishermen,” noting several high-profile reports and cases in 2018 which drew attention to a culture of abuse on Taiwan’s high seas fishing vessels.

Wednesday’s report was released on the same day migrant workers and labor rights advocates slammed a Ministry of Labor plan to exempt migrant fishermen from standardized work hour and overtime limits, citing flexibility for employers.

The report noted severe issues in work conditions for Taiwan’s migrant workers, of whom up to 700,000 come from Southeast Asian countries, according to Taiwan’s National Immigration Agency (NIA). Workers were burdened by “excessive brokerage fees, guarantee deposits, and higher charges for flights and accommodations” during the recruitment process, the report said.    [FULL  STORY]

Man caught spying on women’s bathroom leaps 4 stories at NTUST in Taipei

Man suspected of spying on women’s restroom at National Taiwan University of Science and Technology leaps 4 stories

Taiwan News   
Date: 2019/03/15
By: Keoni Everington, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Entrance to NTUST. (Image from www.ntust.edu.tw)

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — After a man was caught secretly watching women use the restroom at a university in Taipei, he apparently panicked and leaped from the fourth floor of the building, knocking him unconscious, reported CNA.

Taipei City Police today reported that a man had fallen from a building on the campus of National Taiwan University of Science and Technology (NTUST) in Taipei’s Da’an District. A preliminary investigation revealed that a 28-year-old man surnamed Yu (游), who is a graduate student at the university, was suspected of spying on women as they used the toilet.

When he was discovered, he apparently panicked and jumped out the fourth-floor window. He is currently in the hospital under observation, and details of his condition have yet to be released.

At noon today, police said that they received a report from a woman who alleged that she noticed a man spying on her as she used the restroom in a building on the campus of NTUST. When they dispatched officers to the scene, they found Yu lying on the ground near where the peeping incident had been reported.    [FULL  STORY]

President Tsai offers condolences to New Zealand attack victims

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2019/03/15
By: Wen Kuei-hsiang, Elaine Hou and Emerson Lim

Taipei, March 15 (CNA) President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) on Friday condemned the fatal

Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文)/CNA file photo

shootings at two mosques in a coastal city in New Zealand that has left dozens of people killed.

She also expressed condolences to the victims and their families, according to Presidential Office spokesman Alex Huang (黃重諺).

Tsai was very concerned over the shooting incidents, and immediately instructed Foreign Minister Joseph Wu (吳釗燮) to relay to New Zealand Representative to Taiwan Moira Turley her condolences and sympathies to the families of the victims, Huang said.

The president also expressed her concern for New Zealand’s people, and said Taiwanese people stand in solidarity with New Zealand in fighting violence and terrorism, Huang said.    [FULL  STORY]

Cabinet aims to curb misinformation

COMMUNICATION ISSUES: One source said that most government agencies have trouble explaining their policies to the public and often need additional clarification

Taipei Times
Date: Mar 16, 2019
By: Lee Hsin-fang  /  Staff reporter

The Executive Yuan has listed combating misinformation as its priority and would require

Skewered squid is grilled at a stand at the Kaohsiung Squid Culture Festival in Kaohsiung’s Cijin District on May 27, 2015.  Photo: Huang Chien-hua, Taipei Times

government agencies to step up supporting measures, people familiar with the matter said yesterday.

The directive from the Executive Yuan came after a national security conference on Monday, at which President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文), noting that a significant amount of misinformation propagated by China has undermined Taiwan’s democracy and social order, asked the Cabinet to propose countermeasures against Beijing’s plans to implement the “one country, two systems” model in Taiwan.

Since then, Vice Premier Chen Chi-mai (陳其邁) has met with Minister of the Interior Hsu Kuo-yung (徐國勇), Council of Agriculture Minister Chen Chi-chung (陳吉仲) and other ministry heads to discuss possible countermeasures against a growing amount of misinformation related to food security, agriculture and political issues, the sources said.

Most government agencies have problems effectively explaining policies to the public, an official said on condition of anonymity.    [FULL  STORY]

WATCH: Missiles and Pandas on this week’s Taiwan Insider

Radio Taiwan International 
Date: 14 March, 2019
By: Andrew Ryan

This has been an action-packed week for us in Taiwan. As the nation’s military prepares

Join Natalie Tso (left) and Andrew Ryan (right) every week for a brand-new episode of Taiwan Insider on RTI.

for the annual Han Kuang Military exercises in May, we get a sneak peak at jet fighters landing on highways, and more.

This week on Taiwan Insider, Andrew Ryan and Natalie Tso dive into the topic of Taiwan’s defense. A recent request to buy 66 F16-V fighter jets from the United States prompted a closer look at how prepared the country is to fend off an attack. Plus, you may be surprised to learn that even though Taiwan’s military budget and manpower pale in comparison to China’s, there’s a continuing effort to demilitarize outlying Taiwanese islands. This month, Taiwan opened up Dadan Island — a tiny islet of the coast of China — to tourism.

Come for the missiles, stay for the pandas? Today’s #Taiwan will guide you through the on-line response to the suggestion that China gift a pair of pandas to the southern city of Kaohsiung. Mayor Han Kuo-yu says the pandas can be called “Make A Lot of Money” and “Make a Fortune,” but not everyone is buying it.    [FULL  STORY]

How Taiwan Can Survive the Next Phase of the US-China Rivalry

As the African proverb goes: ‘When two elephants fight, it is the grass that gets trampled.’

The News Lens
Date: 2019/03/141
By: Yuan-kang Wang, Taiwan Insight

Credit: Depositphotos

The most important geostrategic event of this century is the rivalry between the United States and China. International competition between these two countries is heating up. As the African proverb goes: “When two elephants fight, it is the grass that gets trampled.” How should Taiwan avoid being trampled?

Broadly speaking, there are four guidelines to follow.

“When Washington has bigger fish to fry, Taiwan’s democratic aspirations can be sacrificed. This is no doubt dispiriting, but it is how international politics works.”

First, Taiwan needs to recognize the supremacy of national interests in international politics. Although the U.S. has a security commitment in the Taiwan Relations Act, this commitment is guided first and foremost by U.S. national interests (instead of those of Taiwan). In a system without overarching authority to adjudicate disputes, states make decisions based on their national interest, not on moral principles. The United States is no exception. For example, the U.S. supported autocratic regimes that abused human rights during the Cold War because it was in its national interest to do so. Similarly, in the midst of the North Korea nuclear crisis in 2003, U.S. President George W. Bush publicly chidedTaiwan President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) for holding a referendum that might upset the status quo (“as we define it”). When Washington has bigger fish to fry, Taiwan’s democratic aspirations can be sacrificed. This is no doubt dispiriting, but it is how international politics works.

Second, Taiwan should synchronize its security interests with those of the United States. The U.S.-China security competition presents an opportunity for Taiwan to strengthen mutual defense cooperation with the U.S. As China rises in power, there is growing fear in the United States about being overtaken. An emerging realization in Washington is that the policy of engagement has not delivered the results as advertised. Hopes of a Chinese democracy remain as distant as ever and China has not behaved – in the eyes of the U.S. – as a “responsible stakeholder.” Instead, China is expanding in the South China Sea; establishing footholds in Africa, Latin America, and across the world; building alternative institutions to U.S.-preferred ones; and becoming increasingly assertive in protecting its interests. Rising powers tend to expand, and China is just following this historical pattern. These actions, however, have awoken the United States. President Obama’s Asia rebalancing strategy and President Trump’s “free and open Indo-Pacific” strategy are both efforts to shore up America’s declining power position in the face of a rising China. In the context of this changing international structure, Taiwan is a strategic asset Washington cannot ignore.    [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan’s Supreme Court upholds lower court’s 14-month sentence for Chinese spy

Taiwan News    
Date: 2019/03/14 
By: George Liao, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

CNA file photo (By Central News Agency)

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Taiwan’s Supreme Court upheld a lower court’s sentence for a Chinese spy on Thursday, March 14, United Daily News (UDN) United Daily News (UDN) reported.

The 31-year-old Zhou Hongxu (周泓旭) was given a 14-month sentence by the Taipei District Court Sept. 15, 2017 for violating the National Security Act after being found guilty of attempting to develop spy networks in Taiwan.

Zhou appealed the sentence to Taiwan High Court, which upheld the district court’s decision, and the case went all the way to the Supreme Court.

It’s now up to prosecutors to decide whether the period of time Zhou was detained could be deducted from his jail time. However, prosecutors couldn’t make such a decision for now, as they hadn’t received any court documents regarding the Supreme Court’s ruling, UDN reported.    [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan suspends operations of Boeing 737 MAX aircraft

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2019/03/14
By: Chen Wei-ting and Y.F. Low

Image taken from Pixabay

Taipei, March 14 (CNA) Taiwan’s Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA) on Thursday issued a directive suspending all commercial flight operations of Boeing 737-8 and 737-9 planes, in the wake of two deadly air crashes involving Boeing 737 MAX aircraft in less than five months.

The directive, effective from 7 p.m. Thursday, applies to all operators flying into, over, or out of Taiwan territory, the CAA said.

In addition, no permission will be granted for any flight plan of Boeing 737-8 and 737-9 operations, it added.

Currently, no Taiwanese airlines have Boeing 737MAXs in their fleets, according to local carriers.    [FULL  STORY]

Chinese student requests asylum after criticizing Xi

Taipei Times
Date: Mar 15, 2019
By: Sean Lin  /  Staff reporter

A Chinese student in Taiwan has requested political asylum after criticizing Chinese

Chinese student Li Jiabao lowers his head in an interview in Tainan yesterday.Photo: Wan Yu-chen, Taipei Times

President Xi Jinping (習近平) on Twitter and called on the government to pass a refugee law.

Li Jiabao (李家寶), who is studying at Chia Nan University of Pharmacy and Science in Tainan, on Tuesday said in a livestream on Twitter that Xi had declared himself emperor by amending the constitution of the People’s Republic of China.

He was referring to the Chinese National People’s Congress last year passing an amendment that removed the term limit for Chinese presidents in a landslide vote.

The livestream was timed to coincide with the first anniversary of Xi’s lifting of the two-term limit, Li said.    [FULL  STORY]