Page Three

Four Princes of the Sea

Eye On Taiwan
Op Ed
By: David Wang

Never judge a book by its cover remains a truism in life as it does when viewing slickly choreographed military parades on special occasions in Taiwan, where GIs hold their heads up high to put on a show worthy of Hollywood envy. With the key word being “show.”

According to the chinatimes.com article posted on Yahoo Taiwan by Lu Chao-long dated May 9, 2016, there is more to the superficial shimmer than meets the eye.

Word is that the Taiwanese Navy is also home to the “Four Princes of the Sea,” or the sons of retired, high-ranking officers. Readers who by now sniff favoritism (aka corruption and influence peddling) may pat themselves on the back for knowing the game of Battleship is played on a tilted board by top-brass insiders.

Incidentally the 1991 scandal involving the purchase by Taiwan of Lafayette class frigates that exposed kickbacks resulted in the death of a Taiwanese navy captain as well as a few others that were assassinated to silence more whistleblowing and blowback.

The Four Princes are all related to ex vice admiral, general and so on. Befitting royalty, these Princes of course are assigned plum duties and don’t have to, as lesser officers, look for medical excuses to evade harsh tours, without sacrificing a dime in pension after an “illustrious” career not on the high seas but high-brow lifestyle.

One Prince in particular, with father a retired vice admiral, was sent to Taiwan’s Chung-Chen Military Academy, then the navy officers’ academy. Unsurprisingly he was, after the freshman year, guaranteed entry to the Virginia Military Institute in the USA, after which its 4-year training he returned to Taiwan to be an officer. His relation to a retired senior officer meant that, after only 2 years in the service, he was eligible to go stateside to “acquire” a 2-year master’s degree. Upon returning to Taiwan, he was averse (taken for granted for Princes) to the rigors of duty at sea, so he, of course, qualified for a state-funded PhD program abroad. But that’s when his ship grounded. Only a year into the doctorate program, he was ejected from the school due to “unethical or dishonorable” behavior and scampered back to Taiwan.

However a seasoned navy man can always survive even the roughest going as he incredibly landed a post abroad as commander. After a brief 3-year tour, he returned to Taiwan and applied for retirement last September due to “vocational disinterest,” which was approved by the authorities as he met all the criteria.

Another blip was spotted on the radar of this Prince of the high seas however. While posted as consultant for the navy intelligence unit, he worked less than 3 months that should have resulted in a below-par evaluation, but yet, with influence-peddling by father, was given a top grade that spared him from a compromising future evaluation and promotional possibility post-PhD.

A military insider said that someone who refuses duty at sea and is ejected from a PhD program after only a year is normally punished. But this Prince, due to humanitarian (aka cronyism, nepotism, influence-peddling and old boys’ club) reasons, was even posted overseas on a 3-year stint (aka sans immediate supervision and hence a sinecure beyond the reach of mere mortals) without reprimand, also allowed to retire with full pension shortly after such service.

Rear Adm. Liu Chih-pin to head new president’s security detail: MND

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-05-08
By: Central News Agency

Navy Chief of Staff Rear Adm. Liu Chih-pin, will serve as the chief aide-de-camp to President-elect Tsai Ing-wen after she takes office on May 20, a Ministry of Defense (MND) spokesman said Sunday.

Liu was appointed to the position after a due selection process that reviewed recommended candidates from the Army, Navy and Air Force commands, said Maj. Gen. Luo Shou-he.

Starting Tuesday, Liu will be undergoing the necessary preparations to take up the post as head of Tsai’s security detail after she is sworn in, Luo said.

Liu is a graduate of the ROC Naval Academy, National Defense University’s Naval Command and Staff College, and War College.

He has served as head of the Navy’s 124th Flotilla, chief of staff of the Navy Fleet Command, and the deputy chief of staff of the Navy Command Headquarters.     [SOURCE]

Magnitude-4.8 quake rocks Nantou

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/08
By: S.F. Wang and Flor Wang

Taipei, May 8 (CNA) A magnitude-4.8 earthquake rattled Nantou County in central Taiwan Sunday

(From the Central Weather Bureau website)

(From the Central Weather Bureau website)

morning, the latest in a series of temblors that have been occurring in different parts of the country since late last month, according to the Central Weather Bureau (CWB).

The quake, which struck at 10:46, was centered 38.1 kilometers northeast of the county hall, at a depth of 9.2 kilometers, the bureau said.

The tremor was felt in all cities and counties across Taiwan, except for the southernmost county of Pingtung, the CWB said.

The highest intensity was in Hehuanshan (合歡山), Nantou County, where it registered at level four, while in Taichung, Changhua and Yunlin in central Taiwan the intensity was three, the bureau said.

In Hualien and Yilan in eastern Taiwan, Hsinchu and Miaoli in northern Taiwan, and Chiayi and Tainan in the south, the intensity was two, according to the CWB.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan-born US Navy officer was entrapped: lawyer

Taipei Times
Date: May 09, 2016
By: William Lowther / Staff reporter in WASHINGTON

Taiwan-born US Navy Lieutenant Commander Edward Lin (林介良), who is accused of spying for Taipei, never committed espionage and was entrapped by the FBI, according to his defense lawyer.

New information on the case emerged last week when navy prosecutors released recordings from closed-door legal proceedings conducted last month.

They said Lin, 39, last year became the target of a sting operation after counter-espionage agents became suspicious of his actions.

They set up Lin to meet with a Mandarin-speaking FBI informant, who was posing as a Taiwanese official.

A military prosecutor, US Navy Commander Johnathan Stephens, said that Lin met with the informant between Aug. 25 and Sept. 9 last year and shared classified information.     [FULL  STORY]

Dollar-for-Diploma

Eye On Taiwan Op Ed
Date: May 8, 2016
By: David Wang

Only via associating with filipina overseas contract workers (aka the so-called underclass) in Taiwan can one be allowed a peek at the true colors of some of the well-to-do in Taiwan, whose genuine inclination and habits are typically hidden from prying eyes when they’re behind the wheel of their haughty German cars with darkly tinted windows that prevent commoners (aka folks born without silver spoons and hired nannies) from intruding on their privacy.

Incidentally many western universities also pamper and pander to these so-called “elites” of Taiwan; after all admitting Taiwanese students is akin to injecting nitrous oxide in an engine, whose power is boosted manifolds with just a miniscule addition. It’s an open secret that international students pay double or triple the tuition of local counterparts to have the chief financial officer of any university laugh all the way to a bank. Especially when 99.9 percent of these Taiwanese students are not taken seriously or treated as equals as the locals, while they also help to create jobs for tutors and ghost writers on campuses, without whom these Taiwanese students would be lost.

It’s the time-proven moneymaker for many western universities crushed under mountainous debts: the “Dollar-for-Diploma” program that is a win-win, creating an endless stream of income for universities who hand out perfunctory sheepskins to mostly endow Taiwanese students with bragging rights and that air of “je ne sais quoi,” which in many cases may be just a emperor-without-clothes syndrome.

Of course there are a few Taiwanese who have garnered doctorates of various stripes overseas to return to their homeland to ingeniously work on brilliantly byzantine gizmos at preeminent institutions to make this world a better place, or even attempt to eradicate global poverty and synthesize vaccines to battle rare diseases as African trypanosomiasis for a dime a dose.

But what of all the rest who have plowed tens of thousands of greenbacks doled out by mom and dad to acquire western post-grad degrees without having even gotten a return call from head hunters after submitting resumes that would even out-dazzle Ben Campbell’s in the movie 21?

Such sizable investment in children’s post-secondary education would make sense if the outlay actually turns quartz into diamond. But apparently not in at least one case.

This 30ish Taiwanese couple, whose hometown being in southern Taiwan befitting all the negative stereotypes of a one-horse town, both have master’s from Holier-than-Thou University (name changed to protect the innocent) in the U.K., for which their spoon-feeding parents paid tuition that can easily build a few new homes in the Philippines or any other developing nation in SE Asia.

The wife (Mrs. A) speaks not quite Queen’s English but pidgin peppered with faulty grammar that would even wrinkle the brows of a 6-year-old in the West, and is about as industrious as The Empress Dowager on Sleep-Aide, relying on two filipina maids to babysit her precious son and newborn daughter.

The hubby (Mr. A) has a master’s in architecture and speaks English with a quasi-British accent, presumptuously believing he has full command of the Anglo-Saxon tongue and even the science of architecture.

 
So why are the two Taiwanese with British master degrees living off parents in Taipei and running a small-time jade retailing
business? Could it be that Mr. A has never earned a dime independently and wouldn’t know where to start if left to his own device? Or could it be that jade is a precious mineral to the Chinese without globally-standardized market value, hence enabling opportunists to hype products with half-truths to defraud gullible buyers?

Mr. A never reads anything of redeeming value except maybe user instructions to the latest smartphone, for which his folks gladly pay because their son seems averse to more intellectually-challenging stimulation. He stays up late regularly to play video games, his only pastime besides occasional basketball with friends, to keep his British-trained brain cells activated.

He also has an expensive racing bicycle as a status symbol and a BMW roadster (courtesy of dear folks of course), both of which do not reflect his motto in life, the core of which shows in his snacking regimen of chips, donuts, pizza and Coca-Cola.

Mrs. A lives up to her Beverly Hillbilly Princess stereotype regardless of a high-brow British master’s degree. Either extremely frugal, lazy or die-hard believer in the merit of sweat as a skincare ingredient, she only bathes once or twice weekly even in searing Taipei summer where temps regularly exceed 30C, while she sometimes won’t flush toilet after defecation and tosses used sanitary napkins casually on the floor.    


One cant help to wonder if her years in Britain, including those in the masters program, have rubbed off on her positively, except to have lightened her parents wallet? She, also never seen reading anything worthwhile, however has learnt to offset her shortcomings by regularly shopping for designer clothes by dropping wads of US$600 on a blouse as if she owns a mint.

 
Unfortunately their parents have not been able to, despite paying an arm and a leg for western
degrees, to magically turn a ugly duckling into a beauty queen, nor Stephen Hawking into a Usain Bolt.

Certainly Mr. As parents can never hold their heads high among friends to brag how their son with a master’s from the U.K. is being sought by leading architectural firms, as can only happen in their most self-delusional dreams.

Dollar-for-Diploma may be an unfamiliar term to many westerners but is a taken-for-granted racket in Asia, including Taiwan, where many enterprises traditionally hold college graduates in higher regard to perpetuate the livelihoods of educational consultants who hold dear Ted and Jane by the hand through the rigorous process of applying for post-grad studies in the West.

It’s totally irrelevant that Ted and Jane possess elementary school level verbal English and junior high written English as they apply to enter MBA and EMBA programs in New York City, London, Sydney, Los Angeles and Toronto. After all these western schools welcome with open arms and a red carpet such well-heeled Taiwanese students. Money talks as the saying goes.

And much of the Taiwanese corporate culture remains dusty as the Model T found in an abandoned barn. It’s still all about having a sheepskin from a top school, preferably Ivy League, to add glitz to one’s resume than having the creativity, tech expertise, foresight, tenacity and gumption to drop out of college as Bill Gates, Paul Allen, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, Michael Dell and Mark Zuckerberg to develop hardware and software to change the world.

During 2007-2008, I translated dozens of study plans, sugary recommendations for Taiwanese college students from Chinese to English while moonlighting for one of the many overseas educational consultants in Taipei. Obviously these students could not or didn’t care to write their own English study plans, with many applying for admission to MBA programs stateside. I also taught these applicants a few hours weekly ostensibly to upgrade their verbal English, which again helped to validate the existence of the “Dollar-for-Diploma racket. None of the students in that class showed adult-level or even high-school verbal English competency.


Calling the business of promoting under-grad and post-grad programs, attracting and admitting Taiwanese college students by American, British and Australian colleges a racket may seem derogatory and scathing but truth often stings. Some Taiwanese will actually admit to certain shady, unethical practices in these colleges, which may herd mostly English-incompetent Taiwanese students into marginalized, mostly useless programs, hype the professional practicality of programs, turn a blind eye to irregular attendance and completion of work by hired help, and guarantee graduation regardless of performance and attendance.

Over a decade ago a Californian university set up, as was trendy then, an EMBA program in Taipei. I taught one of the female Taiwanese students enrolled in the program, in her 30s who spoke rudimentary English but could only write gibberish. She actually asked me to complete one of her class assignments that received a commendable grade, also having revealed that some of her classmates, typically working people, had never attended class but were routinely given diplomas.

WHA invitation receives scrutiny

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-05-07
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Top government officials were said to be looking at an invitation to attend

The photo shows the office building of the World Health Organization (WHO) in Europe.

The photo shows the office building of the World Health Organization (WHO) in Europe.

the World Health Assembly amid confusion about its request to respect the “One China Principle,” reports said Saturday.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed Friday Taiwan had received news of an invite to the May 23-28 event in Geneva, Switzerland, after a long period in which it was feared no invitation would be coming due to Chinese opposition to President-elect Tsai Ing-wen, who will be sworn in on May 20.

The invitation from the World Health Organization was reportedly addressed to incumbent Health and Welfare Minister Chiang Been-huang, who will leave office before the WHA starts.

When asked by reporters about the letter Saturday, President Ma Ying-jeou said he was reading it. The Presidential Office said it would forward the invitation to the new government.

The Mainland Affairs Council reportedly condemned China’s demand, saying the only China it recognized was the Republic of China, Taiwan’s official name. Taiwan had never acknowledged the People’s Republic of China as the one and only China, the MAC said.     [FULL  STORY]

President Ma hosts Mother’s Day picnic for immigrant families

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/07
By: Claudia Liu and Christie Chen

Taipei, May 7 (CNA) President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) on Saturday held a picnic on the grounds of

President Ma Ying-jeou (right)

President Ma Ying-jeou (right)

the Presidential Office for immigrant women in celebration of Mother’s Day, which falls on Sunday.

“Tomorrow is Mother’s Day. Do not forget to give your mother a hug on this special day,” Ma wrote in a Facebook post.

A video accompanying the post shows Ma sitting on the ground at a picnic with mothers from Indonesia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Thailand and China, and their children, in a garden on the grounds of the Presidential Office.

In the video, the mothers are seen introducing dishes from their home countries and chatting with the president.

“New immigrants are an important part of our (society),” Ma wrote.      [SOURCE]

Painful letters from the past for White Terror families

SIMPLE DEMAND:Hsu Hsu-mei, who is 71 years old, said she found out from the letter her father wrote before his execution that he only wanted justice for society

Taipei Times
Date: May 08, 2016
By: Michelle Yun / AFP, TAIPEI

Growing up in Taiwan under martial law, Hsu Hsu-mei (許素美) knew almost nothing about her father,

Hsu Hsu-mei on March 25 in Taipei holds up a portrait of her father, Hsu Kiang, a doctor at Taiwan University, who was executed on espionage charges during the White Terror era. Photo: Sam Yeh, AFP

Hsu Hsu-mei on March 25 in Taipei holds up a portrait of her father, Hsu Kiang, a doctor at Taiwan University, who was executed on espionage charges during the White Terror era. Photo: Sam Yeh, AFP

only that he was executed for being a “thought criminal.”

She was five years old when her father, Hsu Chiang (許強), a doctor, was taken away on espionage charges during the White Terror political purge by the then-Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) regime.

Decades later Hsu Hsu-mei is finally learning more about his death from a “confession letter” her father wrote just before he was executed.

She is one of many White Terror relatives only now putting together the missing pieces of their loved ones’ lives as official files gradually open up.

The letter was discovered in government archives.     [FULL  STORY]

Realpolitik wanted in Beijing

Taiwan News
Editorial
Date: 2016-05-05
By: Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Democratic Progressive Party Chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen’s inauguration as Taiwan’s first-ever 6752558woman president is now only two weeks away, and speculation is mounting as to how relations between Taiwan and China will evolve under her stewardship.

The long transition period since the January 16 election has been overshadowed by the selections for her government team and occasionally interrupted by media storms about comments by team members deemed inappropriate. Most of those incidents focused on issues not directly related to the China issue, such as pork imports from the United States and expropriations of private homes.

As May 20 approaches, and the world expects Tsai to present an inaugural speech, speculation has mounted as to what the new president will say. She is only the second head of state to come from the DPP, a party she only joined after serving as minister of the Mainland Affairs Council under the first DPP president, Chen Shui-bian.

That era, from 2000 to 2008, was marked by tense incidents such as China’s passage of a so-called “Anti-Secession Act” targeted at Taiwan and by “defensive referendums” on the island.

After the Kuomintang returned to power and President Ma Ying-jeou was elected in 2008, there followed eight years of rapid improvements – but too rapid to many Taiwanese, who have accused Ma of sacrificing Taiwan’s dignity and sovereignty in return for trade and other deals that locked in the island tighter to the Chinese economy.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan’s love for music is rare: Berlin Philharmonic conductor

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/05
By: Christie Chen and Sabine Cheng

Taipei, May 5 (CNA) The Berlin Philharmonic’s chief conductor Sir Simon Rattle on Thursday

Sir Simon Rattle.

Sir Simon Rattle.

expressed his long-time fondness for the Taiwanese music audience and his excitement in bringing Beethoven’s symphonies to Taiwan on the orchestra’s fourth visit to the country.

Speaking to the press in Taipei ahead of the orchestra’s two concerts in the city this weekend, Rattle said Berlin Philharmonic members love and respect Taiwan’s music fans, and feel that it is always a “real treat” to perform in Taiwan.

“For all of you who may believe that your response to classical music is a normal thing, I can tell you: we travel all over the world and this is very far from a normal thing,” the conductor said.

He said he is thrilled to bring three of Beethoven’s symphonies to Taiwan this time, including Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125, calling the Beethoven cycle “one of the Everests of classical music.”

The world-renowned German orchestra will perform two concerts at the National Concert Hall in Taipei, on Saturday and Sunday.     [FULL  STORY]