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Premier meets with former AIT director

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/12/19
By: Tai Ya-chen and Y.F. Low

Taipei, Dec. 19 (CNA) Premier Lin Chuan (林全) on Monday met with former American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) director Douglas Paal, who is currently on a visit to Taiwan.

Lin observed that Taiwan-U.S. relations enjoy strong bipartisan support in America and promised that Taiwan would work closely with the incoming administration of President-elect Donald Trump on the basis of existing relations, according to a statement released by the Cabinet.

Lin also expressed concern about the future policies of the Trump administration, especially as they pertain to the Asia-Pacific, the statement said.

Lin and Paal exchanged views on issues such as Trump’s plan to withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Washington’s principles on signing bilateral and multilateral trade agreements with other nations and future cooperation between Taiwan and the United States, it said.    [FULL  STORY]

US military history on Taiwan rooted in confrontation with China

Stars And Stripes
Date: December 18, 2016
By: Seth Robson

President-elect Donald Trump’s recent phone conversation with the leader of Taiwan turned the spotlight back on a place that saw more than its share of brinkmanship during the Cold War.

The island, partly controlled by Qing Dynasty China in the 19th century, became

Airmen of the communications detachment build tables for the Tainan Special Skin Clinic in Taiwan in 1961.
U.S. AIR FORCE PHOTO

Japan’s first overseas colony after the First Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895. The island, sometimes referred to as Formosa, remained under Japanese control until the end of World War II, when it was returned to the Republic of China.

Chinese government officials and troops fled to Taiwan after Mao Zedong’s communist forces took control of the mainland in 1949. The anti-Communists in Taiwan and the Communists in mainland China have been at odds ever since.

In 1954, the U.S. signed a mutual defense treaty with Taiwan after clashes escalated around small islands in the strait between mainland China and Taiwan.

In January 1955, the U.S. Congress passed the Formosa Resolution, giving President Dwight D. Eisenhower authority to defend Taiwan and the offshore islands. The U.S. Taiwan Defense Command was established in the capital, Taipei, in 1955 as a planning headquarters for Taiwan’s defense.

Three years later, the Communists made another effort to capture the island. During Operation Black Magic, Eisenhower ordered the Navy to help guard the strait and modify Taiwan’s F-86 Saber jet fighters with new air-to-air missiles, enabling them to shoot down large numbers of Soviet-built aircraft.

“There was a fairly large and active military group there,” said Paul Brinkley-Rogers, an enlisted sailor who ran Pacific Stars and Stripes’ Taiwan bureau for about four months in 1962. “An offshore island held by the Nationalists was under constant bombardment, and we were backing up efforts by the Nationalists to hold onto the island.”

“The big moment while I was there was a visit by Robert F. Kennedy as U.S. attorney general,” he said, adding that a story he wrote about Kennedy’s motorcade knocking locals off their bicycles ruffled some feathers.

Kent Mathieu was at Taipei Air Station as an Air Force staff sergeant in a personnel office from 1965 to 1968 and now splits his time between Hawaii and Taiwan. There are no U.S. military stationed on Taiwan now, but the island is a fantastic place to visit with friendly people, beautiful scenery and English-language street signs, he said.

In the 1960s, thousands of American personnel and their families lived and worked on numerous bases there, Mathieu said.

“Most people brought their families, and most people assigned to Taiwan loved the place,” he said.

Members of the Military Assistance and Advisory Group were there training the Taiwanese to use U.S. military gear, and there was a large U.S. presence.

“Taiwan was a support base for the Vietnam War, and a lot of the flights went to South Vietnam,” Mathieu said.

According to the conservative Heritage Foundation, U.S. troop strength in Taiwan peaked at 19,000 in 1958 and dropped to between 4,000 and 10,000 by the 1970s.

U.S. personnel were stationed at Headquarters U.S. Taiwan Defense Command and Taipei Air Station in the capital; Shu Linkou Air Station to the northwest; Tsoying Naval Base; and Hsinchu, Chiayi, Tainan and Ching Chuan Kang air bases. Visiting Navy ships often docked at Kaohsiung Harbor.   [SOURCE]

What Taiwan hopes the Trump call could do for its international standing

Taipei, Taiwan, in October 2016. Taiwan has spent most of the last half a century in a diplomatic no man’s land. (David Chang / European Pressphoto Agency)

Los Angelese Times
Date: December 19, 2016
By: Ralph Jennings

Suddenly, Taiwan sees an opening.

Having spent most of the last half a century in a diplomatic no man’s land, in which it technically does not exist as far as most of the world is concerned, Taiwan is hoping to parlay President-elect Donald Trump’s surprising response to its overture into enhanced relations with major countries in Asia.

The risk: an eventual backlash from China, which is both its archrival and its most important economic partner.

Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen is asking India and countries in Southeast Asia for stronger ties in investment and tourism, while seeking to enhance a loose alliance with Japan. The president, in office since May, has chafed against China’s insistence that her island and Beijing unite under one flag.    [FULL  STORY]

Industrial dyes found in ‘tangyuan’ in Taichung

NO WINTER TREAT:Taichung health bureau staff and prosecutors conducted an investigation yesterday because the dumplings are popular at this time of year

Taipei Times
Date: Dec 20, 2016
By: Su Meng-chuan and William Hetherington / Staff reporter, with staff writer

A Taichung food distributor has reportedly been selling glutinous rice balls (tangyuan,

A stack of trays, some containing traditional glutinous rice balls known as tangyuan, are pictured at a Taichung food producer’s facility yesterday. Photo: Su Meng-chuan, Taipei Times

湯圓) containing industrial dyes.

Taichung City Health Bureau staff along with the local prosecutors’ office investigated the local food distributor and uncovered two unmarked containers of dark-colored powder, the bureau said.

A worker at the premises surnamed Chang (張) allegedly confessed to using industrial dyes instead of food colorings in making the tangyuan, the bureau said.

Chang reportedly told investigators that the tangyuan containing the toxic dyes were mostly sold in the traditional markets in the city’s Fengyuan District (豐原).

Under the Act Governing Food Safety and Sanitation (食品安全衛生管理法), the distributor could face up to seven years imprisonment and a fine of up to NT$80 million (US$2.5 million), prosecutors said.

The bureau said it ordered inspections last month ahead of the winter solstice — which this year is tomorrow — when people typically eat tangyuan, adding that investigators made random visits to several vendors and ran food safety tests.

The results of tests became available earlier this month and Rhodamine B was discovered in the samples taken from one vendor who sells about 18kg of tangyuan per week, the bureau said.    [FULL  STORY]

Tax protesters force Presidential Office lockdown

The China Post
Date: December 20, 2016
By: Stephanie Chao

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Around 20 protesters from the Tai Ji Men Qigong Academy

A tax protester stands outside a locked door leading into the Presidential Office on Monday, Dec. 19. Scores of protesters had gathered outside the building, urging the government to enact tax reform. (CNA)

advocating for tax reform outside the Presidential Office forced a sudden lockdown of all gates leading into the building at around 5 p.m. Monday, Dec. 19.

A Presidential Office statement cited the “extreme, passionate actions” of the protesters as the reason for the lockdown.

President Tsai Ing-wen and Premier Lin Chuan’s motorcades were then seen speeding out of the back gate of the Presidential Office at around 7:10 p.m.

At a gate leading into the press corps’ office, security personnel reportedly rushed out of the building to close the door, subsequently locking inside several Presidential Office employees preparing to head home, according to local media.   [SOURCE]

Obama enters the fray on Taiwan-China-US tensions

The News Lens
Date: 2016/12/19

U.S. President Barrack Obama has addressed relations between Taiwan, China and the United States. The comments, which were made at a press briefing in Washington on Dec. 16, follow the historic phone call between President-elect Donald Trump and Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文), and a subsequent series of statements where Trump challenged the U.S.’ status-quo policy to China-Taiwan relations.

President Obama was asked whether the policy needed “a fresh set of eyes” or if “unorthodox approaches” could put the U.S. on a “collision course” with China.

Obama said he was “somewhere in between,” noting both the benefits of “new perspectives,” but also cautioning the incoming administration it is important to have “all the information” before changing the country’s foreign policy direction.   [FULL  STORY]

President attends groundbreaking ceremony for Taoyuan’s social housing project

The 8-year project when completed will provide apartments for about 200,000 households.

Taiwan News
Date: 2016/12/19
By: Wendy Lee , Taiwan News, Staff Writer

President Tsai Ing-wen on Monday attended the groundbreaking ceremony for

(By Central News Agency)

Taoyuan’s social housing construction, and stressed during her speech that the government’s policy to provide more affordable housing options for Taiwanese youth remains unchanged.

The president was accompanied by the Minister of the Interior Yeh Jiunn-rong and Taoyuan City Mayor Cheng Wen-tsan to inaugurate the project.

In her speech, Tsai Ing-wen noted that Taoyuan is among the six major cities in Taiwan with the biggest youth population. And in order to fight for social justice and to improve the lives of Taiwan’s youth, Taoyuan is a perfect place to build social housing, and hopefully the project can serve as an exemplar for other cities.   [FULL  STORY]

Prosecutors reopen probe into death of Indonesian fishery worker

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/12/19
By: Elizabeth Hsu

Taipei, Dec. 19 (CNA) The investigation into the death last year of an Indonesian

From The Reporter website

fishery worker on a Taiwanese boat has been reopened on the instruction of the Control Yuan, the watchdog arm of the government, a spokesperson for the Pingtung District Prosecutors’ Office said on Monday.

The case will be reopened based on forensic and video evidence that the Control Yuan, in its report on the matter, deemed crucial, the Apple Daily reported, citing the spokeswoman Chen Yun-ju (陳韻如).

The Indonesian man in his 40s, identified only by the name Supriyanto, died in August 2015 of septicemia from infected wounds because he was not provided with timely treatment after being physically assaulted about a month earlier on the fishing boat the “Futzuchun,” the Control Yuan said in its report in October.    [FULL  STORY]

U.S. Global Hawk drone shadowed PLA warplanes as they circled Taiwan

U.S. Air Force RQ-4 watched Chinese warplanes from above during their most recent flight near Taiwanese airspace

Taiwan News
Date: 2016/12/19
By Keoni Everington, Taiwan News, Staff WriterNorthrop Grumman RQ-4 Global

An American RQ-4 Global Hawk drone shadowed Chinese military aircraft as they

An RQ-4 Global Hawk unmanned aircraft like the one shown is currently flying non-military mapping missions over South, Central America and the Caribbean at the request of partner nations in the region. (U.S. Air Force photo/Bobbi Zapka)

tightly circled Taiwan’s airspace on Dec. 10, according to a spokesman for the Ministry of National Defense who spoke to United Daily News.

According the official, when the PLA launched a squadron of jet fighters and bombers headed toward Taiwan on Dec. 10, Japan dispatched two F-15 Eagle fighter jets to monitor them while the U.S. launched EP-3 and RC-135 reconnaissance aircraft to surveil the Chinese warplanes. Meanwhile, the U.S. also sent RQ-4 Global Hawk unmanned reconnaissance aircraft to monitor the overall situation from above at high altitude.

During this latest incident involving Chinese aircraft flying around Taiwan, 10 Chinese aircraft conducted a training exercise that passed through the Miyako Strait, the southern extent of Japan’s ADIZ, and then flew in a tight clockwise circle around the outside perimeter of Taiwan’s Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ), before exiting out the Bashi Channel on their way back to China.    [FULL  STORY]

Premier says Taiwan is working to create long-term care system

Radio Taiwan International
Date: 2016-12-18

Residents at the Shuanglien Elderly House in New Taipei City had lunch with Premier

Lunch with the premier

Lin Chuan during a visit on Sunday. (CNA photo)
Premier Lin Chuan visited the Shuanglian Elderly House in New Taipei City on Sunday. He was there to promote what’s being called Long-Term Care 2.0, a new program which is set to start on January 1, 2017.

In early October, Taiwan’s Cabinet passed amendments to the national long-term health care bill to pave the way for the program, which aims to meet the needs of a rapidly aging society. It involves the establishment of nearly 500 integrated community service centers, about 830 daily care centers for seniors, and more than 2,500 neighborhood care stations.    [FULL  STORY]