Page Three

Try ‘second-track’ talks: KMT legislator

‘COLD STANDOFF’:Mainland Affairs Council Minister Katherine Chang said she had not talked to China’s Taiwan Affairs Council minister, and the SEF and ARATS were not in talks

Taipei Times
Date: Jun 15, 2016
By Alison Hsiao / Staff reporter

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Chiang Wan-an (蔣萬安) yesterday suggested that the government engage in cross-strait interactions via a “second track,” which would involve think tanks, academics and “former government officials.”

Chiang at yesterday’s legislative question-and-answer session pressed Mainland Affairs Council Minister Katherine Chang (張小月) on whether the government that took over last month has so far “maintained the [cross-strait] ‘status quo’ that it has promised to maintain.”

“Has the cross-strait status quo been maintained since May 20? [I just need] a simple answer,” Chiang asked, repeating the question several times.

Chang refused to answer the question directly, saying that cross-strait peace has been maintained and is stable, but that there is room for improvement.     [FULL  STORY]

Councilors accuse Ko of new ‘White Terror’ after lie detector revelations

The China Post
Date: June 15, 2016
By: Yuan-Ming Chiao

TAIPEI, Taiwan — A Taipei City councilor Tuesday accused Mayor Ko Wen-je (柯文哲) of attempting to plug a municipal government media leak by employing lie detector tests, calling the move a return to the “White Terror” era. The term is used to describe Taiwan’s one party rule during the Cold War in which political opposition was put down, often using violent, extrajudicial means.

The leak concerned an internal municipal “poll” conducted in April in which councilors were asked by Ko’s administration how the Taipei Dome project should proceed. The results were subsequently leaked to online media, with Ko vowing to track down its source.

Questioned by Councilor Hsu Shu-hua (許淑華) on the matter, Ko admitted that lie detector tests were carried out to track down those who violated administrative orders. City officials contracted a private company to conduct lie detector tests to root out the mole, questioning as many as 18 municipal officials.

An aide to Deputy Mayor Charles Lin (林欽榮), surnamed Huang, refused to comply with the lie detector test and subsequently resigned. Ko confirmed that those who were unwilling to cooperate with the testing were asked to resign. He confirmed during a council session on Monday that the person responsible for the leak “had been dealt with.”     [FULL  STORY]

Barking Mad or Patriotically Taiwanese?

Eye On Taiwan
Op-Ed¹
Date: June 14, 2016
By: David Wang

Some Taiwanese will actually have outsiders believe that Formosa (the nation’s Spanish name) has plenty to offer, with the title “Isle of Treasure” also bestowed upon it to show their pride of place.

But one’s mind was not ringing with the Coca Cola theme “I’d like to teach the world to sing in perfect harmony” nor “All we need is love” or any of the other memorable tunes to inspire advancement of peace and harmony in the world early on June 10, 2016 in Taipei.

One of the TV channels showed a video uploaded by someone in a park in Kaohsiung, the southern major city. A Taiwanese woman by the name of Hung, seemingly in her 50s, was yelping at a neatly-dressed, retired veteran using a walker easily 20 years her senior. She essentially scolded him to go “home,” that his peers have been in Taiwan for some 70 years leeching off the nation, and that the Taiwanese can no longer afford to support his kind, having also labeled him as a refugee.

She obviously discounts totally any contribution to Taiwan by the mainland Chinese GIs, who retreated to Taiwan around 1949 after being defeated by the Communists. These GIs actually helped to build, with back-breaking labor wielding pick axes, parts of the highway that snakes through the central alpine ridge in Taiwan.

This woman, later reported on TV to be a daughter of a mainland Chinese and Taiwanese mom, is technically of Cantonese descent. She would likely be against colonization, emigration, and any kind of interracial encounters.

She has also been exposed as a member of the Taiwan Civil Government group (http://www.civil-taiwan.org/mil-gov.htm) that has several offices across Taiwan. This group believes its proposed administration can resolve the standoff between China and Taiwan. But there are also people who believe in were wolfs, the Big Foot, Santa and earnest work plus a sound college education equal guaranteed entry to the C-suite with 7-figure paycheck. TV reports say the group is distancing itself from Hung in the wake of her outburst.

One can’t help to wonder if she is one of those who, like people employed by certain businesses that provide crowds on-demand, would be a paid pawn for any cause.

Hung also claims to be a reporter but is not affiliated with any news agency; while her phone number inexplicably is that of a travel agency. TV reports showed a staffer at the travel agency who complaint of receiving 1,000-plus calls from irate people who wanted to tell Hung where to go.

Another TV report showed Hung preaching her own political views at a school for pre-teens and has been fired as result.

Could it be that Hung is actually a Looney-Tune zealot playing with a short deck?

What a poster girl Hung would make for all the aborigines worldwide? After all the First Nation people across North America likely share her sentiment toward all the Caucasians who invaded and then colonized their newly adopted homeland. Ditto for the various aborigines in Taiwan who were on the island centuries if not millennia before any Taiwanese.

How do the Taiwanese aborigines genuinely feel about Hung, her compatriots and other later occupiers of the island? Does she care?

So far no aborigines in Taiwan have been reported in media to openly show animosity toward Taiwanese and other non-natives for taking their land.

So it’s settled. Taiwan does have it all, even ethno-racism or racism perpetrated against an ethnic group.

Isn’t it admirable? Taiwan in this respect is in the same league as other western, fully-developed nations as the USA, where racism against Afro-Americans, Latinos and other ethnic groups is taken for granted, albeit frowned upon by politically-correct citizens.

This woman presumptuously categorizes herself among the Taiwanese to be patrons of retired mainland Chinese soldiers. One assumes Hung’s bugbear being all those tax dollars paid by Taiwanese supporting such vets. But is she not wearing politically-motivated blinkers? So she would also self-delusionally believe her compatriots’ tax dollars do not support the long list of Taiwanese who exploit, abuse the national health insurance plan, bureaucrats who are on the gravy train. And if she were lucid, rational and want to be taken seriously, then Hung would also point her guns at the endlessly long list of crooks of all stripes and sizes in Taiwan who not only have burnt tax dollars directly or otherwise, but also wreaked havoc on the nation’s international reputation. Such criminals also raise cost of doing business in Taiwan to boot.

Arguably at the top of that list is former president Chen Shui-bian. Look up http://star.worldbank.org/corruption-cases/node/19577 among many other links that would have Hung do a double take.

Hung was also shown in a TV video asking pointedly a man if he speaks the Min-Nan dialect to show irrefutable proof of his being “real” Taiwanese.

Many Taiwanese speak the Min-Nan dialect or Fukienese as do the mainland Chinese in the Fukien province across the Strait.

Former president Chen, among his other highly-publicized exploits and achievements, speaks the Min-Nan dialect perfectly, Mandarin (the official language taught in Taiwan and spoken by most mainland Chinese albeit with occasional accent) with a ghastly Taiwanese accent, and no other foreign language. But he is not able to be as proudly Taiwanese being technically behind bars or on medical parole.

Incidentally one can safely bet that millions of tax-paying Hispanics or Latinos as well as other ethnic-minority immigrants in the USA, Canada and Australia can barely speak English but are card-carrying citizens of those nations.

But such observation and its socio-political-economic significance would be irrelevant and incomprehensible to Hung, whose global view only extends from her door to the park where she harassed, insulted the elderly vet.

Now one of Taiwan’s explicitly patriotic citizens has shown the world that the island is an equal to the USA, Canada, Australia, Germany among other fully-developed nations, at least in possessing ethno-racism.
Fortunately Taiwan is not a twin to the USA, to which the tiny island often but unjustifiably compares itself, in other respects. For the NRA is not a force to be reckoned with in Taiwan, which also does not share the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution to protect the right of the people to keep and bear arms. Or the likes of Hung could be silenced pronto by other zealots and crackpots with redneck tendencies. Untold numbers of people of all colors in the USA have been killed for publicizing politically-charged, biased, bigoted voices and opinions at far lower decibels than Hung.

¹ Eye On Taiwan provides news and opinion articles as a service to our readers. Often these articles come from sources outside of our organization. Where possible, the author and the source are documented within each article. Statements and opinions expressed in these articles are solely those of the author or authors and may or may not be shared by the staff and management of Eye On Taiwan.

Chinese Films Cross Fingers for Distribution Slot in Taiwan

Cross-strait relations don’t only come up in politics, but in the movie industry as well. And in this battle, the Chinese are at a disadvantage in the Taiwanese market.

The News Lens
Date: 2016/06/13

Chinese director Jia Zhangke’s (賈樟柯) latest film, Mountains May Depart (山河故人), failed to secure

Photo Credit : AP/達志影像

Photo Credit : AP/達志影像

a spot in the quota lottery for this year’s list of 10 Chinese films selected for distribution in Taiwan, disappointing many local movie enthusiasts. But don’t lose hope: the film will be screened at a Jia Zhangke movie festival next month.

This situation reflects Taiwan’s unique regulations regarding the distribution and screening of Chinese films.

Each year, 10 Chinese films are selected for distribution in the Taiwanese market though a quota lottery that is open to the public. Forty-five Chinese films applied for the lottery this year; of those, 35 were left out.

In 2014, the Ministry of Culture (MOC) implemented a new policy that directly grants a distributing license to Chinese films that win an award at the Oscars, the Cannes Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, and Berlin Film Festival. Winners in the best drama or best director categories at the Taipei Golden Horse Film Festival can also be distributed without going through the lottery.     [FULL  STORY]

Croatian piano sensation to perform in Taipei

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-06-13
By: Central News Agency

Croatian pianist Maksim Mrvica, who is known for fusing pop and techno sounds with classical music, 107438422will hold a concert in Taipei on Tuesday.

Mrvica will perform a compilation of classical and crossover pieces at the concert at Taipei International Convention Center, the concert’s promoter, New Arts Platform, said Monday.

Among them are theme songs for movies such as “Mission: Impossible,” “The Godfather,” “Pirates of the Caribbean” and “Exodus.”

The pianist will also perform a new rendition of his signature piece, “Flight of the Bumblebee,” as well as classical pieces including Bach’s Aria from Goldberg Variation and Liszt’s Ballade No. 2 in B Minor.     [FULL  STORY]

President Tsai to begin first overseas visit June 24

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/06/13

Taipei, June 13 (CNA) President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) will depart on June 24 for an overseas visit, 201606130006t0001the Presidential Office announced Monday. It will be Tsai’s first overseas trip since coming to office on May 20.

The president is due back in Taiwan on July 2, the Presidential Office said without giving other details.

Foreign Minister David Lee (李大維) has said that Tsai will visit Panama and Paraguay, two of Taiwan’s diplomatic allies in Latin America.

It has been reported that the president will transit in two U.S. cities — Miami and Los Angeles — on her way to Panama and on her way back to Taiwan but the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said last week that arrangements had yet to be finalized.     [FULL  STORY]

Reactor restart chance ‘virtually zero’

SHUTTERING:The AEC minister said there is no issue of extending the lifespan of the nation’s nuclear power plants, nor are there any plans to decommission them early

Taipei Times
Date: Jun 14, 2016
By: Chen Wei-han / Staff reporter

Following the controversy surrounding the proposed reactivation of the No. 1 reactor at the Jinshan Nuclear Power Plant in New Taipei City’s Shihmen District (石門), Atomic Energy Council (AEC) Minister Hsieh Shou-shing (謝曉星) yesterday said the probability of reactivating the long-shuttered reactor is “virtually zero.”

The reactor has been out of action since December 2014 due to the discovery of a loose handle on a fuel rod cask, and according to a resolution passed by the legislature’s Education and Culture Committee in March last year, the reactor could not be reactivated until the council makes a formal report to the legislature.

The council has not been able to deliver a report, despite five requests, because the committee has refused to arrange a session for a reactivation report.

At a meeting of the Education and Culture Committee yesterday, Hsieh said the council would not request that the legislature arrange a session for the reactivation report, but that the council might agree to deliver a report should the Ministry of Economic Affairs or Taiwan Power Co (Taipower) request it to do so.     [FULL  STORY]

Yilan is undergoing a luxury hotel boom

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-06-12
By: George Liao, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Nearly 30 star-rated hotels have either newly opened or will soon open on the Yilan plain, a 6761192phenomenon said to have been created by conglomerates scrambling to take advantage of a tourism boom expected from the completion of the Suhua Highway Improvement Project in the next three years.

The project makes improvement to three dangerous sections of Suhua Highway (Provincial Highway No. 9) between southern Yilan County and northern Hualien County. The improved highway sections are planned to open to traffic one by one in the next three years, with the first section from Suao to Dongao being scheduled to open at the end of next year.

According to Tourism Bureau’s statistics, since the opening of the Hsuehshan Tunnel, the main artery between Yilan and Taipei on National Highway No. 5, about 10 years ago, the number of hotels in Yilan County has had no significant growth, hovering around 200, and the number of five-star international hotels has remained the same at three.     [FULL  STORY]

Philippines’ National Day celebrations held in New Taipei

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/06/12
By: Wang Hung-kuo and Elizabeth Hsu

Taipei, June 12 (CNA) Celebrations to mark the Philippines’ National Independence Day, June 12,

New Taipei Mayor Eric Chu (back row, center) and MECO Managing Director Antonio Basilio (back row, second right).

New Taipei Mayor Eric Chu (back row, center) and MECO Managing Director Antonio Basilio (back row, second right).

were held in New Taipei City on Sunday, featuring a flower parade.

New Taipei mayor Eric Chu (朱立倫) gave a speech at the event, describing the Philippines as a friendly neighbor and paying tribute to Philippine workers whom he said were making a valuable contribution to Taiwan.

He noted that many Philippine nationals who came to Taiwan to work as caregivers or on construction sites had settled in Taiwan, becoming “new immigrants.”

Thanks to their contribution to New Taipei’s economic and social development, the city has improved and become multi-cultural, the mayor said.     [FULL  STORY]

Premier establishes ‘lunch box meetings’

MEANINGFUL:DPP Legislator Liu Shih-fang said that the Cabinet needs to ensure the weekly meetings are forums for policy discussions and not ‘public relations exercises’

Taipei Times
Date: Jun 13, 2016
By: Lu Yi-hsuan and Jonathan Chin / Staff reporter, with staff writer

Lunch meetings between Cabinet officials and Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) legislators are to be held on a weekly basis in a bid to improve communication between the Executive Yuan and the Legislative Yuan on major policy decisions, Premier Lin Chuan (林全) said.

The move is perceived to be Lin’s response to allegations over the past few weeks that he had failed to coordinate with DPP lawmakers on a several issues, ranging from the future of nuclear power to traffic management on freeways during the Dragon Boat Festival holiday weekend.

There has been substantial backlash against the party caucus over its perceived failure to deliver on President Tsai Ing-wen’s (蔡英文) promise for her administration to establish better teamwork between the Cabinet and the legislature, with DPP legislators quoted by sources as telling Lin that caucus members were tired of “learning about policy decisions from newspaper reports.”

Lin yesterday promised to convene informal “lunch box meetings” at least once per week or when the need arises, which are to be attended by Cabinet officials and DPP lawmakers on relevant legislative committees, a proposal that has so far met with the approval of DPP legislators.     [FULL  STORY]