Page Three

Logistics of a US carrier port call not assessed: ministry

Taipei Times
Date: , May 06, 2016
By: Staff writer, with CNA

The Port of Kaohsiung is capable of accommodating the USS John C. Stennis aircraft carrier, but

A rainbow forms over the bow of the USS John C. Stennis on Feb. 3, 2015. Photo: AFP / HANDOUT-US NAVY / IGNACIO D

A rainbow forms over the bow of the USS John C. Stennis on Feb. 3, 2015. Photo: AFP / HANDOUT-US NAVY / IGNACIO D

no assessment has ever been made of the Taiwanese military’s ability to provide logistics support for such a vessel, a top Ministry of National Defense official said yesterday.

There is enough space and depth at the port to allow the Stennis to dock, Vice Minister of National Defense Hsu Pei-shan (許培山), a vice admiral and former navy chief of staff, told a meeting of the legislature’s Foreign and National Defense Committee.

However, “other considerations” such as docking restrictions would have to taken into account, whether a ship is a military or a merchant vessel, Hsu said in response to a question from Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Wang Ding-yu (王定宇) on whether the port could accommodate the Stennis.

US Senator Ted Cruz on Friday last week suggested on Twitter that the Stennis should be rerouted to Taiwan since Beijing had refused to allow a US carrier strike group, including the Stennis, to make a port call in Hong Kong amid strained relations over territorial disputes in the South China Sea.

Noting that the Port of Kaohsiung is big enough to accommodate the world’s largest container ship, the CMA CGM Group’s Benjamin Franklin, Wang asked Hsu whether the Stennis could dock there.     [FULL  STORY]

Go Forth and Multiply?

Eye On Taiwan
Date: May 5, 2016
By: David Wang

to peek inside the minds of idiosyncratic Taiwanese, whose off-the-wall behaviors can leave casual observers slack-jawed. Kate on Oct. 17, 2008 felt sufficiently at ease to open ajar her closet to reveal a shuddering tale. And it’s often the highly-educated, sedate ones who shock bystanders by flipping presumptions on end.

Kate, with a masters from Sydney to look as tame, well-behaved as any mid-30s woman from Taiwan, reinforces the negative stereotype that her native land, known for its mature ITC sector, unfortunately produces plenty of physically mature adults with juvenile mindset and behavior. However, one can argue till the cows come home whether Kate is just the tip of the iceberg in Taiwan, or are there multitudes of similar women wearing diapers (fastened excessively tight in Kate’s case to have cut off essential oxygen supply) beneath their designer dresses all over.

Perhaps the setting in which one grows up can tip the balance of mental adjustment. Kate is from a town outside of Kaohsiung (the largest southern city in Taiwan mostly known for heavy industries, third-world-quality drinking water, frequently reported crimes, with one female resident having confessed that all her friends have had their purses snatched), where locals are not known for tuning in to media to stay updated with global affairs, to glean the finer points of the SS16 creations shown at Paris Fashion Week, to read about the latest trend in integrating greenery on exteriors of condo towers, and where the folks actually believe Sex-and-the-City lifestyle is the norm in the West.

Some 5 years ago Kate stayed in a hotel in Taipei where a British man also happened to be a guest. They passed by each other a few times in the lobby, but being strangers Kate always avoided his line of sight, belying the inclination of her alter ego.

One night while the Englishman sat in the lobby, Kate walked by and inexplicably sat next to him. What happened next may be an intriguing seminar topic for the Global Psychiatric Associations annual convention. But Kate incredulously laid her hand on his manhood, which, instead of triggering shock, dismay and bewilderment as would with most men, bizarrely forced tears from his eyes.

Those tears should have sounded an alarm to most liberal-minded women but Kate, with her own self-protective mechanism apparently short-circuited, was too overcome with wanton-indulgence to see straight.

An affair followed that saw Kate become pregnant.

They tried living together for a while, which truly revealed to Kate what shed dragged in from the urban jungle. The man, according to Kate, is delusional and pathologically-insecure: he sometimes forced her against a wall by barring against her neck with chopsticks one minute and then begging for forgiveness on his knees the next; compelled her not to give out their phone number to friends, take her eyes off him while phoning her friends; insisted on having his hand held while walking together in public or hed rant like a baby while sitting on the sidewalk; made sure their shoes were not placed too far apart at home; and never allowed her parents to call after 8 p.m.

After two weeks together with the Englishman in their funny farm, Kate ditched him to shoulder alone single-motherhood. In retrospect, she still could not fathom why she did not find the reason to abort. The explanation is simple for a fully mature, well-adjusted and educated, responsible woman would not have allowed herself to wade into uncharted water as if headed for summer break.

Incidentally, certain segments of the Taiwanese demographic, especially those raised in Small Town with blinkered vision, actually believe a correlation exists between Caucasian and genetic superiority (about as sensible as believing all Scandinavian women are attractive as Candice Bergen). At the risk of rubbing salt in an old wound, Kate should pray that her child has not inherited the basketcase genes from the British dad.

Ex-VP Annette Lu publishes memoirs

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-05-04
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Former Vice President Annette Lu presented her memoirs, titled “The 6752311Atypical Vice President Annette Lu” on Wednesday.

Lu, 71, a veteran feminist and human rights activist, was elected the nation’s first female vice president with the Democratic Progressive Party’s first-ever president, Chen Shui-bian, in 2000, with both being re-elected in 2004 for a second and final term.

Last January 16, Taiwan elected DPP Chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen as its first-ever woman president, and she will be inaugurated on May 20.

Lu said she did not invite Tsai to her book presentation because if her “boss” Chen could not come, then others did not need to be invited. Chen was sentenced to 20 years in prison for corruption after he left office, but has been living in Kaohsiung with his family on medical parole since early last year.

Lu reportedly described herself as “stupid” because before she worked at the Presidential Office Building for 2,922 days, she spent 1,933 days in prison. As a democracy activist, she was sentenced to prison under martial law for taking part in opposition protests.     [FULL  STORY]

DPP recognizes 1992 meeting, not ‘1992 consensus’: Frank Hsieh

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/04
By: Kelven Huang, Sophia Yeh and Elaine Hou

Taipei, May 4 (CNA) The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) does not recognize the existence

Frank Hsieh (front) attends a DPP meeting Wednesday.

Frank Hsieh (front) attends a DPP meeting Wednesday.

of the so-called “1992 consensus,” but acknowledges that there was a meeting between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait in 1992, former Premier and DPP heavyweight Frank Hsieh (謝長廷) has said recently.

Asked about his views on the “1992 consensus” during a recent interview with Japan’s Nihon Keizai Shimbun newspaper, Hsieh said the DPP’s stance is that Taipei and Beijing never reached a consensus that allows for respective interpretations on the meaning of “one China.”

However, he said the party recognizes that there was a meeting between Taiwan and China in 1992, although the term “1992 consensus” was only created in later years.

“The DPP has also mentioned the spirit of the meeting in 1992,” he said. There were agreements reached in that meeting and “we should respect some of the spirit of these agreements, because they are historical facts,” he said, without elaborating.

The “1992 consensus” refers to a tacit understanding between Taipei and Beijing on a formula for relations between the two sides that would allow dialogue between them — that there is only one China, with each side free to interpret what “one China” means.     [FULL  STORY]

Defense officials silent over US Navy port calls

Taipei Times
Date: May 05, 2016
By: Staff writer, with CNA

The Ministry of National Defense yesterday said it has no comment on suggestions by US politicians that the US Navy should consider shifting port calls of its aircraft carriers to US allies and partners, including Taiwan.

The Pentagon late last month said that Beijing refused to allow a US carrier strike group, including the USS John C. Stennis, to make a port visit in Hong Kong amid strained relations over territorial disputes in the South China Sea.

US Senator Ted Cruz said on Twitter after the Pentagon’s announcement that the strike group should reroute to Taiwan.
US Representative Randy Forbes, chairman of the Seapower and Projection Forces Subcommittee of the US House of
Representatives Armed Services Committee, said the “time has come to consider these alternate locations.”

Deputy Minister of National Defense Cheng De-mei (鄭德美) said at a legislative hearing that he had no comment on the issue.
“There is no information on this at this time. We have only read the news reports,” Cheng said.     [FULL  STORY]

Premier-designate Lin to visit Legislative Yuan

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-05-03
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Premier-designate Lin Chuan will visit the Legislative Yuan on 6751972Thursday and present his first government policy report as Cabinet chief on May 31.

Lin and his team will take office on May 20, the same day President-elect Tsai Ing-wen will be sworn in.

The designated spokesman for the new Cabinet, Tung Chen-yuan, said Tuesday that Lin would arrive with a delegation from his new team at the Legislative Yuan on the morning of May 5 for a meeting with Legislative Speaker Su Jia-chyuan and Vice Speaker Tsai Chi-chang.

Both were elected on February 1 to head the new Legislature, which for the first time ever counts a majority of members from the Democratic Progressive Party. DPP Chairwoman Tsai was elected president on January 16, but her transition period lasts until May 20.

On his visit to the Legislative Yuan, Lin will be accompanied by his choices as vice premier, Lin Hsi-yao, secretary-general, Chen Mei-ling, office manager Shih Keh-he, and by Tung, the spokesman said.     [FULL  STORY]

Women groups protest low number of women in incoming Cabinet

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/03
By: Sophia Yeh and Lilian Wu

Taipei, May 3 (CNA) Several women’s groups descended on the Democratic Progressive Party’s 61147235(DPP’s) headquarters Tuesday to protest the low number of women in the incoming Cabinet to be led by Premier Lin Chuan (林全).

There are only four women among the 40 members of Lin’s Cabinet, equaling the lowest ratio since Taiwan’s democracy was just beginning to take shape, they said.

“The situation has regressed to the gender equality level of 1996, when Taiwan held its first popular presidential election and had just entered the stage of democratic transformation,” according to a joint statement issued by the groups.

The lowest ratio of women in the Cabinet over the past 25 years was 10 percent in the Cabinet of then-Premier Vincent Siew in 1997, even lower than the 13.5 percent of women in Lien Chan’s (連戰) Cabinet in 1993.   [FULL  STORY]

Transport fraud suspects overseas, 49.1 percent say

Taipei Times
Date: May 04, 2016
By: Stacy Hsu / Staff reporter

Amid snowballing controversy over last month’s deportations of Taiwanese fraud suspects to China, nearly half of respondents in a poll published by the New Party yesterday supported the transportation of such suspects to areas outside of Taiwan for interrogation.

The poll was conducted by Apollo Survey and Research Co — a company affiliated with Want Want China Times Group — at the behest of the party between Thursday and Friday last week following the deportation of 45 Taiwanese fraud suspects to Beijing from Kenya last month.

Asked how the government should handle Taiwanese fraud suspects based overseas who target foreign citizens to better fight transnational telecom scams, 49.1 percent of respondents said sending them to areas other than Taiwan for investigation.

About 33 percent said they believed the suspects should be deported to their home nation for investigation, while 18 percent declined to express a stance or had no opinion, the poll showed.     [FULL  STORY]

Tiger Airways to launch ‘Pay Day’ deals May 3

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-05-02
By: George Liao, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Tiger Airways on May 3 will launch special deals in connection with the pay day for all its 16 6751872international routes.

The “PAY DAY” early bird deals can be purchased between 10 a.m., May 3 and 11:59 p.m., May 5, with single trip fares starting from NT$699 (before tax) to NT$1,299 (before tax), according to media reports.

Tickets purchased through these special deals will be good for flights between August 1, 2016 and October 29, 2016, a period that covers part of the summer vacation, the reports said.

In addition, Tiger Airways has recently announced plans to launch flights between Taoyuan and Sendai, Japan, starting on June 29.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwanese artist elected to American Academy of Arts and Science

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/02
By: Hsu Chi-wei and Evelyn Kao

Taipei, May 2 (CNA) Taiwan-based artist Liu Kuo-sung (劉國松), widely regarded as the father of

Liu Kuo-sung (Photo courtesy of NTNU)

Liu Kuo-sung (Photo courtesy of NTNU)

modern Chinese ink painting, has been elected a new foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AAAS), according to the prestigious academy.

The AAAS, frequently known as the American Academy, is one of the oldest and most prestigious honorary societies in the world and is a leading center for policy research in the United States.

The AAAS Council elects its fellows annually to recognize them for efforts on behalf of the advancement of science or its applications that are scientifically or socially distinguished. Election to the Academy is considered one of the nation’s highest honors.

Being named on the academy’s recently released list of 2016 new fellows and foreign honorary members makes Liu the first member of the academy in the arts category to come from Taiwan.

To be elected to the AAAS, individuals must be nominated by current members. They are then evaluated on the contributions they have made both to their field and society during their career.     [FULL  STORY]