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Taiwan’s New Power Party loses another lawmaker

Hung Tzu-yung to follow Freddy Lim as independent

Taiwan News
Date: 2019/08/13
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Legislator Hung Tzu-yung (first left) announcing her departure from the NPP.
Legislator Hung Tzu-yung (first left) announcing her departure from the NPP. (By Central News Agency)

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Legislator Hung Tzu-yung (洪慈庸) announced Tuesday (August 13) she was leaving the New Power Party (NPP), adding to the crisis the small group has been facing over the past month.

On August 1, one of its most visible members, rock star Freddy Lim (林昶佐), said he was stepping out of the party to become an independent legislator. The crisis escalated when the party’s chairman, Chiu Hsien-chih (邱顯智), announced his resignation on Monday (August 12), though on Tuesday party leaders still said they were trying to persuade him to stay on.

Another one of the NPP’s original five legislators, Kawlo Iyun Pacidal, was facing expulsion due to allegations of corruption against an aide. However, due to the electoral system, if she is removed, the NPP can replace her with another member.

Hung, 36, first gained prominence as the sister of a conscript who died due to abuse by officers in 2013, while the NPP originated mainly with the 2014 Sunflower Movement against a trade agreement with China.    [FULL  STORY]

No plans to adjust visa-free treatment for Filipinos: MOFA

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2019/08/13
By: Emerson Lim

Taipei, Aug. 13 (CNA) Taiwan has no plans to adjust its visa-free treatment for Philippine nationals at present, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) said Tuesday, following reports that several Filipino workers disguised as tourists were caught trying to slip into the United Arab Emirates via Taipei.

MOFA spokeswoman Joanne Ou (歐江安) made the remark at a press conference Tuesday, noting that the final destination of the Filipino nationals in the case was not Taiwan.

However, Ou said, her ministry is conducting an ongoing review of the effects of visa-free treatment for the Philippines, Thailand and Myanmar, based on the principal of reciprocity, as well as the numbers and types of offenses committed by citizens from these countries in Taiwan.

As part of its New Southbound policy, Taiwan has since 2016 allowed travelers from the Philippines, Thailand and Brunei 14-day visa-free privileges, while nationals from Indonesia, Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos are given various conditional visa-free treatment.    [FULL  STORY]

Imported dengue fever cases reach 10-year high: CDC

EL NINO EFFECT: High temperatures and extreme weather have helped make this year’s dengue fever outbreaks in Southeast Asia more serious, the CDC said

Taipei Times
Date: Aug 14, 2019
By: Lee I-chia  /  Staff reporter

222There have been 303 imported cases of dengue fever this year, the highest number in a decade, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said yesterday.

Seventeen imported cases were confirmed last week, bringing the total since last month to 107 as of Monday, Epidemic Intelligence Center Director Liu Ting-ping (劉定萍) said.

People who were confirmed to have dengue in the past month were mostly infected in Vietnam, Cambodia and the Philippines, and more than 90 percent of the cases confirmed this year came from infections picked up in Southeast Asian countries, she said.

This is peak transmission season for dengue fever in the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Laos, Maldives, Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, Singapore and Indonesia, and the CDC has issued a level 1 travel advisory for these nations, as well as Myanmar and India, she said.    [FULL  STORY]

VIDEO: 97-year-doctor sees patients every day of the year

Radio Taiwan International
Date: 13 August, 2019
By: Paula Chao

97-year-old doctor Hsieh Chun-mei

97-year-old doctor Hsieh Chun-mei[/caption] Most people in their 90s have long retired, but not a 97-year-old doctor named Hsieh Chun-mei. Dr. Hsieh is still enjoying seeing patients every day, which is what he has been doing over the past 74 years.  

At the age of 97, Dr. Hsieh Chun-mei is still practicing medicine. Hsieh sees patients every day of the year. He is a very attentive and conscientious doctor.

Hsieh walks slowly and has a slightly hunched back. But he is able to do pretty much everything himself, from dispensing medicine to giving his patient injections.

Many of Hsieh’s patients have been seeing him for decades, including the man who was actually delivered by Dr. Hsieh when he was born. The man said his family of five generations have all been Dr. Hsieh’s patients, including his grandson.    [FULL  STORY]

Protests in Hong Kong are worrisome: Tsai

Radio Taiwan Internatiomnl
Date: 12 August, 2019
By: Paula Chao

President Tsai Ing-wen (right) and Lord Baron Peter Truscott from the UK (CNA photo)

President Tsai Ing-wen says the conflicts between pro-democracy activists and police in Hong Kong are worrisome. She was speaking Monday while meeting with a delegation led by Lord Baron Peter Truscott from the UK.

Tsai said Taiwan is deeply concerned about the situation in the former British colony.

“Taiwan has traveled along its own difficult path towards democracy. Therefore, we are paying particular attention to, and are deeply concerned about, Hong Kong’s freedom and democratic development. I myself and the legislative caucuses of the ruling and opposition camps have all voiced support for Hong Kong. We also strongly believe that [we] must safeguard Taiwan’s democracy and freedom and continue making Taiwan a beacon of democracy while cooperating with like-minded countries to strive for democratic development around the world," said Tsai.     [FULL  STORY]

If China crushes Hong Kong, is Taiwan next?

The Hill
Date: 08/12/19
By: Dov S. Zakhim, Opinion Contributor

THE VIEWS EXPRESSED BY CONTRIBUTORS ARE THEIR OWN AND NOT THE VIEW OF THE HILL

© Getty Images

At the most recent meeting of the Aspen Strategy Group — which includes current and former senators, former senior officials, retired military, leading academics and analysts — a number of the participants expressed considerable doubt about whether the United States could defend Taiwan in the event of a Chinese attack, or even whether it would attempt to do so. Behind the concerns voiced at Aspen, Colo., was the shadow of a potentially brutal Chinese paramilitary operation to crush the dissenters in Hong Kong. The fear was that once Beijing’s “one country, two systems” policy toward Hong Kong was terminated, Taiwan would be next.

Moreover, they argued, there is no way Washington could send two carriers into the Taiwan Strait, as it did during the 1996 crisis, causing Beijing to back down from its threat to subjugate the island. Having determined that it never again would be forced to submit to such a humiliating retreat, the Chinese Communist government has spent the past two decades modernizing and expanding its forces to respond to any potential threat of American attack. 

Indeed, many analysts doubt whether American carriers could even operate within what has been termed “the first island chain” — Japan, northern Philippines and Taiwan — which is now within the range of Chinese land-based DF-21D and DF 26 anti-ship ballistic missiles. Moreover, given what they view as America’s dismal prospects for defending Taiwan, several participants also argued that aircraft carriers, in general, are so highly vulnerable that the time has come to begin phasing them out of the fleet. At a minimum, they argue the Navy should at least to halt any new construction of these $13 billion mastodons. 

It is certainly true that the threat to aircraft carriers is far more serious today than it was in the second half of the 20th century. Moreover, there is little doubt that carrier tactics and operations in support of Taiwan will continue to be far more difficult than in the past. That does not mean, however, that carriers are obsolete, as their critics contend, or that the defense of Taiwan is nothing more than a pipe dream.     [FULL  STORY]

Taipei Astronomical Museum to livestream Perseids meteor shower

Shower can exceed 100 meteors per hour at peak viewing time

Taiwan News
Date: 2019/08/12
By:  Taiwan News

The Perseids meteor shower will reach its peak on the night of Aug. 13. (photo: Wikimedia Commons)

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) –The annual Perseids meteor shower will hit its crescendo Tuesday (Aug. 13) night, and armchair astronomers can tune in to a livestream on the Taipei Astronomical Museum's YouTube channel.

According to the museum, the best time to observe the Perseids, one of the three biggest annual meteor showers, is from 2 a.m. until just before dawn on Wednesday (Aug. 14). The museum will set up a high-resolution night vision camera at Fushoushan Farm in order to share the spectacle with the public via livestream.

Taipei City's Department of Transportation announced that there will be traffic control at Yanmingshan from Tuesday evening to Thursday to prevent a traffic jam, and vehicles might be blocked from entering the star-gazing area, including Yangde Boulevard (仰德大道) and Qingtiangang (擎天崗), depending on weather and traffic conditions. There will also be extra bus services in the Yangmingshan area at night.    [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan prepared for disruptions to Hong Kong flights: minister

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2019/08/12
By: Yu Hsiao-han and Joseph Yeh

Taipei, Aug. 12 (CNA) Major airports in Taiwan have taken some simple contingency measures to deal with cancellations to flights to Hong Kong, which shut down its airport Monday afternoon after pro-democracy protesters disrupted its operations.

Transportation Minister Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) said in a Facebook post Monday that before the Hong Kong airport resumes normal flights, Taiwanese airports will not allow passengers headed to Hong Kong to enter airport control areas.

At the same time, Hong Kong-bound passengers who have already entered the airport control areas will be asked to give back their boarding passes.

The ministry will also ask airlines to provide food and accommodation for passengers booked to Hong Kong and help them rebook their flights, he said.    [FULL  STORY]

Over 4,000 Taipei children not vaccinated

Taipei Times
Date:  Aug 13, 2019
By: Lee I-chia  /  Staff reporter

More than 4,000 children in Taipei have yet to receive the three types of vaccination required before

A woman holds her daughter as she receives a vaccine at a clinic in Taipei in an undated photograph.
Photo: Tsai Si-pei, Taipei Times

starting elementary school, despite schools opening in less than a month, the Taipei Department of Health said yesterday.

As of Tuesday last week, among 24,855 children in the city who are to begin first grade next month, 4,054, or 16.3 percent, had yet to complete the required vaccinations, National Immunization Information System data showed.

The vaccinations are the second dose of measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine, the first dose of live attenuated Japanese encephalitis chimeric vaccine, and a single dose of tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis and polio vaccine (Tdap-IPV).

Vaccination rates for the target group of children were 92.5 percent for the MMR vaccine, 90.1 percent for Japanese encephalitis vaccine and 87.9 percent for Tdap-IPV, while 83.7 percent had received all three vaccines, the department said.    [FULL  STORY]

Romantic drama strikes a chord with overseas Filipino workers

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2019/08/11
By: William Yen


Taipei, Aug. 11 (CNA) The Philippine romantic drama "Hello, Love, Goodbye," which portrays the lives and struggles of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), resonated strongly with Filipinos in Taiwan, and two extra screenings were needed on Sunday to meet demand.

Marie Yang, co-organizer of the screening, told CNA that only two screenings were planned originally, but due to demand for tickets from hundreds of Filipino migrant workers, she and co-organizer Myra Liu decided to hold two extra screenings on Sunday afternoon.

"There were so many people asking me for tickets, so that's why I was compelled to open up two more screenings," she said. "A total of 980 tickets were sold and there were still another 100 people asking me for tickets."

The rush for tickets was believed to be because many overseas Filipino migrant workers identified with the movie's story and characters, Yang said.    [FULL  STORY]