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CORONAVIRUS/Taiwan to screen all arrivals from the Philippines for COVID-19

Focus Taiwan
Date: 07/24/2020
By: William Yen

A testing facility at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport. CNA photo July 16, 2020

Taipei, July 24 (CNA) All passengers arriving from the Philippines will have to undergo mandatory testing for COVID-19 starting Sunday because of the rising number of imported cases from the country, the Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) said Friday.

The new regulation will apply to both Taiwanese citizens and resident permit holders, said Health Minister Chen Shih-chung (陳時中), who also heads the CECC, at a press briefing. Taiwan will pay for the COVID-19 tests.

People with symptoms suggesting a passenger could have COVID-19 will be collectively quarantined in a government facility, while those without symptoms will be asked to quarantine at home while waiting for the results, Chen said.

The move was made because over half of all of Taiwan's imported cases in July have been from the Philippines, Chen said.    [FULL  STORY]

Police suspect man with knife in three franchise robberies

Taipei Times
Date: Jul 25, 2020
By: Staff writer, with CNA

Robberies at three convenience stores in New Taipei City and Taipei early yesterday morning might have been committed by the same person, New Taipei City police have said.

The New Taipei City Police Department’s Sijhih Precinct said that a man wearing a cap and a mask at 12:58am yesterday robbed a convenience store of NT$9,000 in cash at knifepoint.

The robber cut the right hand of a male clerk, surnamed Chiang (江), before running off with the money, the police said, adding that Chiang is fine after being treated at a nearby hospital.

The city’s Shulin Precinct reported a robbery at a convenience store at 3:47am yesterday.
[FULL  STORY]

Citizen Judges Act’s passage shame for Taiwan: Critic

Act criticized for lack of public consultation, disregard for calls to weigh jury system

Taiwan News
Date: 2020/07/22
By: Huang Tzu-ti, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

(CNA photo)

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — The passage of the contentious Citizen Judges Act (國民法官法) on Wednesday (July 22) “marked a shameful day in the history of Taiwan democracy,” said Taiwan Public Opinion Foundation (TPOF) Chairman You Ying-lung (游盈隆).

In a historical vote following three days of review, the legislature passed the 113-article act, which will allow citizens to join professional judges in handing down verdicts in criminal trials. The act goes into effect in 2023.

The move has been hailed by President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) as a milestone in the country’s pursuit of judicial reform, with her describing it as ushering in a new era where court rulings will be more transparent and in tune with people’s expectations. Nevertheless, those opposed to it have lambasted the government for hastily pushing through the bill without a sound assessment and without addressing calls to incorporate a jury system.

You, a former member of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), castigated the DPP, which holds a majority at the legislature, for ramming through the bill without consulting the public.    [FULL  STORY]

Newborn giant panda nicknamed Jou Jou

Focus Taiwan
Date: 07/22/2020
By: Li Wan-yu and interns
Grace Hu and Meryl Kao

Photo courtesy of Taipei Zoo

Taipei, July 22 (CNA) A giant panda cub that was born almost one month ago at Taipei Zoo has been given the nickname Jou Jou (柔柔) because of its gentle nature and chubbiness, zookeepers said Wednesday.

The cub, born to Yuan Yuan on June 28, appears to have inherited the calm and quiet nature of its father Tuan Tuan, the zookeepers said, referring to two giant pandas that China gave to Taiwan in 2008 amid warmer relations.

According to Taipei Zoo, Jou Jou weighed 565.6 grams on July 17 and has been growing well, remaining quite chubby.

Jou Jou has been under the care of handlers because of an injury to her back that she sustained during her birth, but it has healed, and the cub will soon be returned to her mother, the zoo said.    [FULL  STORY]

Alliance to promote space radiation testing

FORGING AHEAD: The alliance aims to help Taiwan evolve into a nation that can supply electronic components that are able to withstand space-level radioactivity

Taipei Times
Date: Jul 23, 2020
By: Lin Chia-nan / Staff reporter

Signatories celebrate the formation of an alliance to promote cosmic-level radioactivity resistance testing in Taoyuan yesterday.
Photo courtesy of Chang Gung University

An alliance to promote space-level radioactivity resistance testing has been established to help local firms connect with the global space industry, the National Applied Research Laboratories (NARL) said yesterday.

After Taiwan’s first domestically produced satellite Formosat-5 was launched in 2017 to supply remote-sensing images, the nation has worked harder to foster a space industry and last year established the Taiwan Space Industry Development Association.

The alliance aims to help Taiwan evolve from a nation with a booming semiconductor industry to one supplying electronic components that can withstand space-level radioactivity, it said.

The NARL-affiliated National Space Organization, which leads the association, would be tasked with establishing a platform and standards for verifying components’ resistance to space-level radioactivity, it added.    [FULL  STORY]

Education ministry to remodel school playgrounds across Taiwan

Radio Taiwan International
Date: 21 July, 2020
By: Katherine Wei

Education Minister Pan Wen-Chung. (CNA Photo)

The Ministry of Education has marked NT$2.7 billion to give all public preschool and elementary school playgrounds a new look. That’s the word from Education Minister Pan Wen-chung on Tuesday. 

Pan was attending an annual conference for department heads in the education field in Tainan. He says that the ministry is planning to revamp all public school playgrounds in the next two years. Nearly 2,000 elementary schools and some 800 preschools will enjoy the fruits of this project.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan’s Dynamic New Envoy to the U.S.

Hsiao Bi-khim’s coming to Washington marks a unique shift in U.S.-Taiwan relations at a critical time

Stimson Center
Date: July 21, 2020
By: Jason Li

This week, Hsiao Bi-khim (萧美琴) was sworn as Taiwan’s new envoy to the United States. This change of guard at Taiwan’s representative office in Washington comes at a time of souring U.S.-China relations and deepening engagement between Taiwan and U.S. officials. As U.S.-China tensions across the high seas and cyberspace elsewhere grow, the U.S. has shown unprecedented support for Taiwan. Numerous Senators and House members sent messages congratulating Tsai Ing-wen’s re-inauguration in May, and high-ranking members including Speaker Pelosi sent farewell letters to Representative Stanley Kao (高碩泰), whom Hsiao has now succeeded.

Hsiao brings to Washington a unique background that lends particular weight to her capacity to deepen U.S.-Taiwan relations. Her bicultural and bilingual identity is unprecedented for a representative to the U.S. Born to a Taiwanese father and American mother, she lived in Taiwan through junior high school then came to the U.S. for senior high. She completed her bachelor’s from Oberlin and master’s from Columbia.

Hsiao has developed a reputation as a leading voice in Taiwanese diplomacy, especially within the ranks of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). She has been involved in U.S.-Taiwan relations since the 1990s and has quickly risen amongst the ranks. Her first job was as the head of the DPP’s mission to the U.S., which she held until she returned to Taiwan to serve as director of the DPP’s International Affairs Department. She served as President Chen Shui-bian’s interpreter and adviser and, in 2008, became special assistant to the new DPP chair, Tsai Ing-wen. From 2012 to 2020, she served in the Legislative Yuan, where she focused on foreign affairs and defense.

The new representative has developed a close relationship with the top leadership in Taiwan. She accompanied presidential candidate Tsai on her 2011 and 2015 Washington visits. Primed to become the new U.S. representative, she accompanied vice president-elect Lai Ching-te on his historic visit to Washington in January this year. As a DPP loyalist, Hsiao comes to Washington with a partisan background that her predecessor, a career diplomat, did not have. Her close personal ties with Tsai Ing-wen—she has been described as Tsai’s confidant and “female bestie [闺蜜]”—may facilitate the deepening of U.S.-Taiwan relations at the highest levels.    [FULL  STORY]

Oxford passes motion to establish sister city ties with Taiwan

Oxford City Council to move forward with scouting out Taiwanese sister city

Taiwan News
Date: 2020/07/21
By: Kelvin Chen, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Oxford City Councilor Stephen Goddard (right) (Oxfordshire Liberal Democrats photo)

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — The British city of Oxford on Monday evening (July 20) voted to become sister cities with a yet-to-be-determined Taiwanese city.

The motion, proposed by Oxford City Councilor Stephen Goddard, was overwhelmingly passed with 42 votes in favor, one against, and two abstentions. Due to the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, the vote was held via online conference, CNA reported.

The proposal stated that Oxford currently has sister cities in Europe, the Middle East, and the Americas but none in East Asia. If Oxford successfully establishes a sister city relationship in Taiwan, it will be the first in the U.K. to do so, Goddard stated.

Goddard said during the online meeting that even though Taiwan is diplomatically isolated, it is still prosperous and has kept its deaths in the single-digits during the coronavirus epidemic. There are many Taiwanese cities that Oxford could pair up with, he remarked.
[FULL  STORY]

Taiwan takes delivery of third indigenous ocean research ship

Focus Taiwan
Date: 07/21/2020
By: Lee Hsin-Yin

CNA photo July 21, 2020

Taipei, July 21 (CNA) Taiwan's newest ocean research vessel was delivered Tuesday, marking a milestone in domestic shipbuilding and putting the country on track to improve its marine, climate and oceanographic research.

The "New R/V Ocean Researcher 1" is the third and largest vessel in a fleet of three commissioned by the government and built by CSBC Corp., Taiwan at a cost of NT$1.6 billion (US$52 million).

The Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) took delivery Tuesday of the 2,155-ton New R/V OR1, which can carry 47 people.

It will be handed over to National Taiwan University (NTU) to replace the R/V OR1, which was launched in 1985, and it will be used for advanced academic projects and national ocean research programs, NTU said.    [FULL  STORY]

Elderly dry cleaners strike a pose in forgotten articles of clothing

Radio Taiwan International
Date: 20 July, 2020
By: Leslie Liao

An elderly couple has gotten creative with clothing that their customers have left behind

An elderly couple has gotten creative with clothing that their customers have left behind[/caption] A dry cleaning store in Central Taiwan has found a new purpose for clothing items that people have forgotten about or left behind. The elderly couple behind the shop has breathed new life into forgotten garments by modeling the clothes on Instagram.

This ain’t your grandpa and grandma’s clothes. Well, wait, it actually might be. But, one thing’s for sure, this elderly couple looks absolutely fresh rocking that retro getup. Grandpa and grandma are lighting up the internet with their new swag.

Where did they get such stylish clothes, you ask? Well, they’re leftover from customers that have either forgotten about them or just haven’t come to get them. You see, this elcouple has been running a dry cleaners for the past sixty years in the Central Taiwan city of Taichung. Some of the clothes they’re wearing in these pictures are nearly 20 years old. 
[FULL  STORY]