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Tsai defends her dual role plan

EXPLANATION:Tsai Ing-wen said there was a need for a well-coordinated team to tackle the challenges facing Taiwan and communicate between levels of government

Taipei Times
Date: Mar 04, 2016
By: Chen Hui-ping and Jonathan Chin / Staff reporter, with staff writer

President-elect Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) yesterday said she would “take

President-elect Tsai Ing-wen yesterday speaks to the media at a news conference at the Hsinchu Science Park. Photo: CNA

President-elect Tsai Ing-wen yesterday speaks to the media at a news conference at the Hsinchu Science Park. Photo: CNA

responsibility” for contradicting previous statements that the nation’s president should not also be head of the ruling party, comments she made in criticizing President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九).

“The ongoing and changing political situation” and the Democratic Progressive Party’s (DPP) new position as the majority party in the legislature made it necessary for her to double as president and DPP chairperson, she said at a news conference at the Hsinchu Science Park after she met with semiconductor industry officials.
DPP officials on Wednesday said that Tsai would remain as party leader after her inauguration on May 20, prompting journalists at the news conference to ask her about the shift in her stance.

Taiwan is beset by “comprehensive challenges,” and it would take “an efficient, well-coordinated team” to implement her platform, for which the DPP had made amendments to its party charter, she said.     [FULL  STORY]

MOHW takes measures to tackle emergency room crowdedness

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-03-02
By: George Liao, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

The Ministry of Health and Welfare said on Wednesday that it will coordinate 6738691and designate emergency hospitals according to front-line situations in times of epidemics, such as flu, to relax crowdedness at the hospital emergency rooms across Taiwan.

The Taiwan Society of Emergency Medicine (TSEM) paid a visit to the Ministry of Health and Welfare (MOHW) on Wednesday, during which TSEM Secretary General Yen Zui-shen said that there were at the moment more than 100 patients waiting for beds at emergency rooms across Taiwan, a number very different from the 1,010 beds the MOHW said of available at intensive care units in the country now.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan ranked 29th for travel freedom by U.K. immigration firm

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/03/02
By: Evelyn Kao

Taipei, March 2 (CNA) Germans hold the strongest passports, giving them 7239561visa-free access to 177 countries, while the Republic of China (Taiwan) is in 29th place, with visa-free access to 137 countries, according to a new index released Wednesday by the British immigration and citizenship firm Henley & Partners.

Sweden is in second place for the second consecutive year, with visa-free access to 176 countries, according to the Henley & Partners’ 2016 Visa Restrictions Index, a global ranking of countries according to the number of other countries that their citizens can travel to without having to obtain a visa.     [FULL  STORY]

Blunder gives KMT seven legislative convener seats

POOR SHOWING:The DPP also had the PFP and the luck of the draw to blame for the results, but was not helped by Legislator Yang Yao, who voted for himself, for a tie

Taipei Times
Date: Mar 03, 2016
By: Alison Hsiao / Staff reporter

The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT), which has only 35 seats in the 113-seat

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Alicia Wang, right, yesterday shakes hands with another lawmaker after being elected co-convener of the legislature’s Social Welfare and Environmental Hygiene Committee after Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Yang Yao voted for himself by mistake. Photo: Wang Yi-sung, Taipei Times

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Alicia Wang, right, yesterday shakes hands with another lawmaker after being elected co-convener of the legislature’s Social Welfare and Environmental Hygiene Committee after Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Yang Yao voted for himself by mistake. Photo: Wang Yi-sung, Taipei Times

legislature after the legislative elections on Jan. 16, yesterday won seven convener seats with the help of the People First Party (PFP), the luck of the draw and a blunder by a Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) lawmaker as the legislature held elections for 16 conveners of eight committees.

Of the eight legislative committees, the Education and Culture Committee and the Foreign and National Defense Committee are the only two that choose their conveners via recommendation instead of election. DPP Legislator Huang Kuo-shu (黃國書) and KMT Legislator Apollo Chen (陳學聖) will take turns to preside over education and culture committee meetings, while the foreign and national defense committees are to be overseen by DPP Legislator Liu Shih-fang (劉世芳) and KMT Legislator Johnny Chiang (江啟臣).     [FULL  STORY]

Legislative speaker refuses to bow to Sun

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-03-01
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Legislative Speaker Su Jia-chyuan rejected a demand from a 6738397Kuomintang lawmaker Tuesday to bow in front of the portrait of Dr. Sun Yat-sen.

The move came in the aftermath of a proposal by Democratic Progressive Party legislator Lawrence Kao to remove the legal requirement that such portraits be present in government buildings.

During a Cabinet question-and-answer session before the Legislative Yuan Tuesday, KMT lawmaker Chang Li-shan asked both Premier Simon Chang and Su bow three times in front of the Sun portrait.

While Su tried to prevent the incident, the premier still did what the lawmaker asked.     [FULL  STORY]

Two Taiwan restaurants on Asia’s 50 best list

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/03/01
By: Y.F. Low

Taipei, March 1 (CNA) Two restaurants in Taiwan have been included on the 2016 Asia’s 50 66092665Best Restaurants list sponsored by Italian mineral water brand San Pellegrino.

Le Mout, a French restaurant in Taichung, placed 30th in the list of the top 50 after ranking 26th last year.

RAW in Taipei, a collaboration between Singapore-based Taiwanese chef Andre Chiang (江振誠) and the Hasmore Restaurant Group, made it onto the list for the first time and was ranked 46th.

The list, published by William Reed Business Media, is based on a vote by more than 300 chefs, restaurant owners and food connoisseurs from six countries across Asia.     [FULL  STORY]

Tsai outlines biomedical, smart machinery policies

Taiwan Today
Date: March 1, 2016

A series of policy initiatives aimed at boosting the competitiveness and

Taichung City-based Quaser Machine Tools Inc. is one of the Taiwan firms driving the pace of processing and technology upgrades in the smart machinery industry. (CNA)

Taichung City-based Quaser Machine Tools Inc. is one of the Taiwan firms driving the pace of processing and technology upgrades in the smart machinery industry. (CNA)

production value of Taiwan’s biomedical and smart machinery industries were recently proposed by ROC President-elect Tsai Ing-wen.

The biomedical component includes reforms for 31 items covered under amendments to the Act for the Development of Biotech and New Pharmaceuticals Industry, Fundamental Science and Technology Act and Pharmaceutical Affairs Act. This raft of changes is prioritized for review in the ninth Legislature, which commenced sittings Feb. 19 in Taipei City.

“We hope these bills can be greenlighted by year-end,” Tsai said during a conference with industry leaders Feb. 23 at Nangang Software Park in Taipei City. “The biomedical industry in Taiwan is full of potential and what we need to do is boost production value by pooling the resources of the academic, public and private sectors.”       [FULL  STORY]

Live and let fry

Celebrity chef Huang Ching-he’s new TV series sees her visiting 70 eateries ranging from street stalls to Michelin-starred restaurants

Taipei Times
Date: Mar 02, 2016
By: Tony Phillips / Contributing reporter in London

Taiwan-born celebrity chef Huang Ching-he (黃靜億) has spent most of her life

Huang Ching-he watches chef Cheng Kun-yin cook three-cup chicken at Shin Yeh Restaurant in Taipei. Photo courtesy of Ching’s Amazing Asia, Food Network UK

Huang Ching-he watches chef Cheng Kun-yin cook three-cup chicken at Shin Yeh Restaurant in Taipei. Photo courtesy of Ching’s Amazing Asia, Food Network UK

in the UK but has never forgotten her roots, with the nation’s capital city featuring prominently in her new TV series Ching’s Amazing Asia (黃靜億的亞洲佳餚).

In addition to Taipei, the program showcases the food scene in Hong Kong, Macau, Okinawa and Tokyo. It currently airs every Monday on the Asia Food Channel.
Huang, who has been nominated for a daytime Emmy and recently received an award from the Taiwan Tourism Bureau for the series, says the program was a dream come true.

“I really wanted to celebrate the chefs in Asia and Asian cuisine and take people on a tour so they can see with their own eyes the beauty of the signature dishes of the chefs and really kick open the kitchen doors,” Huang says.     [FULL  STORY]

Air quality in Kaohsiung, Pingtung hits hazardous levels

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/03/01
By: Zoe Wei and Frances Huang

Taipei, March 1 (CNA) Air quality in Kaohsiung City and Pingtung County 201603010005t0001reached hazardous levels Tuesday morning, and people in the two areas with breathing problems were urged by the Environmental Protection Administration (EPA) to avoid outdoor activities.

According to EPA air monitoring data, concentrations of fine particulate matter smaller than 2.5 micrometers (PM2.5) were at a maximum 10 on the EPA’s 1-10 scale in the Nanzih, Renwu, Zuoying, Cianjin, Fengshan, Daliao and Linyuan areas of Kaohsiung as of 10 a.m.     [FULL  STORY]

Water rate in Taipei go up nearly 30% from Mar 1

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-02-29
By: George Liao, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Average water rate in Taipei City will go up 28.16 percent, starting from 6738230March 1, but for the 941,000 customers whose average water consumption is less than 20 units (1 unit =1,000 liters) per month, accounting for 61.89 percent of all customers, the base rate of NT$5 per unit will remain unchanged, according to the Taipei Water Department.

After the hike the average water rate is NT$11.56 (NT$12.14 with tax) per unit (1000 liters), the department said.

With the base rate remaining unchanged, the imminent water rate hike is designed to make heavy users pay more so as to encourage them to save water, the department said.     [FULL  STORY]