Page Three

Man who claimed to be carrying a bomb at airport detained

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2017/12/16
By: Chiu Chun-chin and Kuan-lin Liu

Taipei, Dec. 16 (CNA) A man was detained on Saturday by the Aviation Police Bureau after claiming he was carrying a bomb when undergoing a security check at the airport.

The 60-year old Taiwan national, surnamed Chen (陳), was scheduled to take a Tigerair flight from Taoyuan International Airport to Macao this afternoon.

However, Chen was unaware of the airline’s regulations on weight and size limits for carry-on bags as a result of which he was asked to pay to check an extra bag.

Chen reportedly grew irritated when asked questions about what he was carrying in his bag and after claiming not to have scissors said “I have a bomb.”    [FULL  STORY]

Pasuya Yao to run for Taipei mayor

Taipei Times
Date: Dec 17, 2017
By: Lee I-chia  /  Staff reporter

Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Pasuya Yao (姚文智) yesterday said he would today officially announce his plan to run in next year’s Taipei mayoral election.

Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je (柯文哲) said that Yao is within his rights to run in the election.

“A mayor is the CEO of the city, and whether they have the ability to make the city a better one through their management skills should be the main point of the election,” Yao said on Facebook.

Yao said that he would share his vision for Taipei at the Taipei International Convention Center at 3pm today, and invited anyone who is concerned about Taipei’s future to join him.    [FULL  STORY]

Irrigation Association amendment moves forward

Radio Taiwan International
Date: 2017-12-15

An amendment to the Act of Irrigation Association Organization has passed its second

Scuffles broke out between ruling and opposition lawmakers. (CNA photo)

reading amid scuffles between ruling and opposition lawmakers.

Under the amendment passed Friday, the association will be turned into an official body with its head appointed by the government. At present, the head is elected directly by its members.

The caucus whip of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), Liu Chao-hao, discussed the purpose of the amendment. “Our main goal is to allow the public to share water resources together, to reorganize the irrigation association, and to make it an official body so it can better take care of farmers and ensure that [resources] are shared by the general public,” Liu said.    [FULL  STORY]

Taoyuan mayor most popular of Taiwan’s six special municipality leaders

Popularity list headed by 3 DPP incumbents facing re-election next year

Taiwan News 
Date: 2017/12/15
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Taoyuan City’s Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) mayor,

Taoyuan Mayor Cheng Wen-tsang (in white). (By Central News Agency)

Cheng Wen-tsang (鄭文燦), came out far ahead as the most popular leader of the country’s six special municipalities, a poll showed Friday.

Of the six mayors, the three DPP ones enjoyed the highest popularity ratings, while independents and the only opposition Kuomintang mayor fared poorly.

According to the survey by the Taiwan Brain Trust, Cheng, a former DPP spokesman, received an approval rating of 75.9 percent, ahead of veteran Kaohsiung Mayor Chen Chu (陳菊), who scored 66.2 percent, the Central News Agency reported.

Taichung Mayor Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) came third with 56.1 percent, the poll found.
[FULL  STORY]

CAL to seek compensation from 3 trouble-making Japanese passengers

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2017/12/15
By: Wang Shu-fen and Elizabeth Hsu

Taipei, Dec. 15 (CNA) Taiwan-based China Airlines (CAL) has decided to list three Japanese passengers as unpopular travelers who will be barred from traveling with the airline, and in addition will seek compensation from them for disruption they caused on a Dec. 9 Taipei-Bangkok flight.

The passengers on CAL’s unwanted list traveled from Fukuoka, Japan last Saturday to Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport, where they connected with a CAL flight bound for Bangkok.

The CAL flight departed at around 1:55 p.m. carrying 260 passengers, but was forced to return around 30 minutes later out of safety concerns because the three Japanese passengers, believed to already be drunk during their transit, started making trouble.
[FULL  STORY]

Experts speculate about Ma Ying-jeou’s motives

COMPLAINTS: A likely motive was to drag the case onto the political front line, perhaps because Ma feels the probe is heading in an unfavorable direction

Taipei Times
Date: Dec 16, 2017
By: Jason Pan  /  Staff reporter

Legal experts yesterday said they suspected former president Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) had an ulterior motive after he gave a public talk after filing complaints against Taipei prosecutors, accusing them of leaks and violating the confidentiality of a case under investigation.

Ma on Wednesday filed a lawsuit against Taipei Chief Prosecutor Shing Tai-chao (邢泰釗) and Taipei Head Prosecutor Wang Hsin-chien (王鑫健) for allegedly leaking details from a case under investigation, after media reports that prosecutors have a recording allegedly implicating Ma in financial irregularities arising from the sale of Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) assets more than a decade ago.

Attorney Chou Wu-jung (周武榮) said Ma’s filing was motivated by several factors, among them the opportunity to speak publicly, sending his message via the media that he wanted “to warn those involved in the case not to talk in the wrong way.”
[FULL  STORY]

Beijing Can’t Understand Taiwan’s Democracy

The Communist Party is baffled — and angered — by the new activism across the straits.

Foreign Policy
Date: December 15, 2017
By: Kevin Fan Hsu

As Chinese President Xi Jinping settles into a second term, he has received fawning

TOPSHOT – Same-sex activists hug outside the parliament in Taipei on May 24, 2017 as they celebrate the landmark decision paving the way for the island to become the first place in Asia to legalise gay marriage.
Crowds of pro-gay marriage supporters in Taiwan on May 24 cheered, hugged and wept as a top court ruled in favour of same-sex unions. / AFP PHOTO / SAM YEH (Photo credit should read SAM YEH/AFP/Getty Images)

accolades from leaders around the world. Yet as Xi’s power at home consolidates, the relationship between Beijing and Taiwan has degenerated sharply, thanks to the Chinese Communist Party’s blindness to generational shifts that have taken place on the island.

Over the past decade, the Chinese economy has continued to grow, consumer choices have expanded, and the CCP has tightened its vice-likegrip on power. But while China’s political horizons have narrowed, Taiwan’s democracy has bloomed — and that has made the island nation harder and harder for Beijing to understand.

When Taiwan was a single-party autocracy, China could glower across the strait at its Cold War adversary. Though the two sides were enemies, they were mutually comprehensible. When Taiwan became a democracy but was still dominated by the Kuomintang, a party the Communists had long dealt with, China could manage. However, today’s vibrant and participatorysociety in Taiwan confuses and dismays the CCP.
[FULL  STORY]

China angered as U.S. considers navy visits to Taiwan

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang drinks a cup of water at a regular news conference in Beijing, October 27, 2015. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

Reuters
Date: December 14, 2017 
By: Michael Martina, Jess Macy Yu

BEIJING/TAIPEI (Reuters) – China accused the United States on Thursday of interfering in its internal affairs and said it had lodged a complaint after U.S. President Donald Trump signed into law an act laying the groundwork for possible U.S. navy visits to self-ruled Taiwan.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang drinks a cup of water at a regular news conference in Beijing, October 27, 2015. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Tensions have risen in recent days after a senior Chinese diplomat threatened China would invade Taiwan if any U.S. warships made port visits to the island which China claims as its own territory.    [FULL  STORY]

Foreign minister condemns Chinese ambassador’s threat

Radio Taiwan International
Date: 2017-12-14

The foreign minister, David Lee, has condemned words by China’s ambassador to the

The foreign minister, David Lee, has condemned words by China’s ambassador to the United States threatening a military attack on Taiwan. (CNA photo)

United States threatening a military attack on Taiwan. Lee was answering questions in the Legislature on Thursday concerning a US act that strengthens Washington’s support of Taiwan.

The US president, Donald Trump, signed the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) on Tuesday. Two areas that have drawn attention are the prospect of Taiwan conducting military drills with US forces and the possibility of US warships docking at Taiwan’s ports.

New Power Party legislator Freddy Lim asked Lee about China’s response to the act. The Chinese ambassador to the United States, Li Kexin, had said the day an American warship docked in Kaohsiung would be the day the PLA would “liberate” Taiwan. The foreign minister called the ambassador’s words inappropriate and unhelpful.
[FULL  STORY]

Taiwan Navy mixes models with Marines in 2018 calendar

Proceeds go to charity: Navy

Taiwan News 
Date: 2017/12/14
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – The 2018 Navy Calendar has combined Navy staff, models and Capital Futures (群益期貨) to offer an eyeful of the Navy life to the public for a good cause, the China Times reported Thursday.

The Navy presents its 2018 calendar (photo courtesy of Navy Command).

With the new year rapidly approaching, the time to buy calendars and agendas has arrived again.

One of the most eye-catching calendars to appear this year-end comes from the Navy, which has chosen to present pictures of its healthy Marines running, shooting and strutting along with female models under the theme of “warm-hearted heroes.”
[FULL  STORY]