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Taiwan ambassador meets with US deputy assistant secretary in Belize

Taiwan’s ambassador in Belize and US State Department principal deputy assistant secretary talked about possible collaborations

Taiwan News
Date: 2019/10/29
By:  Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — Taiwan’s Ambassador in Belize Remus Chen (陳立國) has met with U.S.

Taiwan Ambassador in Belize Remus Chen and US State Department Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Julie Chung. (Michael Kozak Twitter screengrab)

State Department Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Julie Chung to talk about possible collaborations.

Joanne Ou (歐江安), spokesperson for Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affair (MOFA), on Tuesday (Oct. 29) confirmed the meeting, adding the two officials discussed ways to collaborate on matters concerning Taiwan, the U.S., and Belize. Issues such as strengthening bilateral trade and investment partnerships facilitating the sustainable development of Central America were addressed, added Ou.

[FULL  STORY]

Tainan Arts Festival logo scrapped amid plagiarism accusation

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2019/10/29
By: Chang Jung-hsiang and Evelyn Kao

Image taken from Tainan Arts Festival’s Facebook page

Taipei, Oct. 29 (CNA) The logo for the 2019 Tainan Arts Festival logo has been found to be a copy of the work of British illustrator Maria-Ines Gul and posters bearing the logo have been taken down after its designer admitted plagiarism, the Tainan City Cultural Affairs Bureau said Tuesday.

The festival kicked off Oct. 9 and is slated to conclude Nov. 11.

However, the plagiarism was revealed Oct. 24 in a message posted on the Tainan Arts Festival's Facebook page.

The bureau then contacted the three-member studio dubbed @3urstudio, which it had commissioned to design the poster.    [FULL  STORY]

Intelligent transport plan to receive NT$6bn budget

SAFETY: A NT$3 billion plan has led to the creation of a system that reduced accidents by 30 percent, Minister of Transportation and Communications Lin Chia-lung said

Taipei Times
Date: Oct 30, 2019
By: Shelley Shan  /  Staff reporter

The government would spend NT$6 billion (US$196.6 million) on a five-year project to boost the development of intelligent transportation systems in the 5G era, Minister of Transportation and Communications Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) said yesterday.

Lin made the announcement at the International Green and Smart Mobility Forum in Taipei, hosted by the Taiwan Institute for Sustainable Energy together with the Telecommunication and Communication Foundation.

The government would hold an auction for 5G licenses at the end of this year, and next year would be the first year of 5G service in the nation, Lin said.

Unlike 4G technology, 5G allows ultra-high-speed data transmission, ultra-reliable low-latency communications and massive machine type communications, he said, adding that the transmission latency could be reduced from 100 milliseconds in 4G to within 10 milliseconds in 5G.
[FULL  STORY]

European vertical and aerial dancers grace Taichung

Radio Taiwan International
Date: 28 October, 2019
By: Natalie Tso

Vertical dancers from Barcelona, Spain(photo by CSR Taiwan)

Vertical dancers from Barcelona, Spain(photo by CSR Taiwan)[/caption] When you think of ballerinas, you probably imagine them dancing on a stage. But a free performance this past weekend in Taichung, central Taiwan, saw ballerinas dancing in the air.

Two ballerinas dressed in black are suspended above the crowd. They’re dancing off the side of a high-rise building. These are vertical dancers from Barcelona, Spain, treating Taichung City to a free performance on Friday and Sunday.

The Spanish vertical dance troupe also performed at the Lantern Festival in Chiayi in 2018. They combine modern dance and art to present an innovative style of aerial dance. Last Friday, they danced on the face of a building, 20 meters off the ground.

When a reporter asked people if they’d ever seen people dance off walls, one woman said never.  She was intrigued.  Another person said that watching dancers perform in mid-air is a rare sight in Taiwan and he’d love to see it.    [FULL  STORY]

Asian Media and Entertainment Reinforce a Backward Meat-Loving Culture

The News Lens
Date: 2019/10/28
By: Xiaochen Su

Photo Credit: CNA

While the West is promoting to reduce meat consumption out of concerns over climate change, animal abuse, and personal health, Asia’s meat consumption is on the rise.

In East Asia, one of most frequently produced TV programs is food travel shows. The hit Taiwanese food travel show “Super Taste” (食尚玩家), for instance, has been running since 2007 with more than 1,100 episodes documenting the best foods around the world. Also running weekly since 2007, “Himitsu no Kenmin Show” (カミングアウトバラエティ!! 秘密のケンミンSHOW), is a Japanese program that introduces regional cuisines largely unknown to the rest of the country.

In these shows, celebrity hosts scour their home countries and around the world for top-of-the-line foods, projecting their visual deliciousness to envious viewers through high-definition videos of the dishes just as they come out to the dining table.

Whether it is Taiwan, Japan, or South Korea, these food shows have one thing in common — meat. Among all the beautiful ingredients presented to the audience, red meat remains front and center. The juicy sights of the red-and-white layers of raw beef sizzling on the frying pan and the freshly cut fish fillet glistening on the chopping board dominate the screen. Brand-name meat continues to represent the highest culinary luxury that true gourmands should aspire to in East Asia.

However, across the Pacific Ocean, the meat-dominated perception of “good food” has been rapidly shifting in the past few years. Media attention garnered by the rise of Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods, two meat-substitute producers, shows that among a younger generation of Americans, a shift away from meat is no longer just for health, but also for moral issues like environmental protection and animal rights. Eschewing the consumption of meat, then, has become an expression of social progressivism.    [FULL  STORY]

US Defense Dept. opens Flagship language center in Taiwan

New Flagship center at NTU one of US govt.'s two elite Chinese programs abroad

Taiwan News
Date: 2019/10/28
By: Sally Jensen, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — A Chinese Overseas Flagship language center has been established by the U.S. Defense Department at National Taiwan University to foster exchanges between the U.S. and Taiwan.

William Stanton, the vice president of National Yang Ming University and former director of the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT), previously wrote for Taiwan News:

The Language Flagship is a unique innovation of the National Security Education Program (NSEP) funded by the U.S. Department of Defense. Flagship’s mandate is to develop advanced foreign language skills among young Americans who, according to NSEP, “will take their place among the next generation of global professionals, commanding a superior level of proficiency in one of ten languages critical to U.S. national security and economic competitiveness.” The overall goal is to “educate a citizenry prepared to address the nation’s well-being in the 21st century.”


The project director of the Flagship program in Taiwan, Der-lin Chao (趙德麟), said that as one of only two overseas Chinese-language Flagship centers in the world, the Taipei center will strengthen bilateral ties between the U.S. and Taiwan.    [FULL  STORY]

Fugitive in killing of police officer arrested, jailed in Kinmen

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2019/10/28
By: Hung Chia-yuan (洪家原)

Taipei, Oct. 28 (CNA) A man who was found guilty for his involvement in the beating to death of an off-

Fugitive in killing of police officer arrested, jailed in Kinmen

duty police officer outside a Taipei nightclub in 2014 and who jumped bail was arrested Sunday by Taiwan's Coast Guard.

The man, Kuo Shih-chun (郭士均), was arrested when he illegally entered Leiyu township in Taiwan's offshore Kinmen County from Xiamen in China's Fujian Province.

As Kuo was sentenced to 11 years in prison in March this year, Fuchien Kinmen District Prosecutors Office sent him to Kinmen Prison to start serving his sentence Monday.

On the night of Sept. 14, 2014, police detective Hsueh Chen-kuo (薛貞國) died after being set upon and beaten by a group of people outside Xinyi District's nightclub Spark.    [FULL  STORY]

Doctors issue choking warning

‘DIFFICULT BREATHING’: After three children in Kaohsiung went to the hospital while choking on nuts, doctors advised parents to cut these types of foods into small pieces

Taipei Times
Date: Oct 29, 2019
By: Fang Chih-hsien and Dennis Xie  /  Staff reporter, with staff writer

After three children in Kaohsiung nearly died, doctors advised that foods such as peanuts, melon

A plate of cooked peanuts are pictured in Kaohsiung yesterday.
Photo: Fang Chih-hsien, Taipei Times

seeds and nuts should be cut into pieces before feeding to children to avoid choking.

Hsu Mei-hsin (徐美欣), a doctor at Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital’s pediatric intensive care unit (PICU), on Sunday said the hospital has recently treated three children who developed acute respiratory distress because of peanuts stuck in their airways.

All three patients had to undergo surgery to remove the foreign bodies, Hsu said.

PICU director Kuo Hsuan-chang (郭玄章) said that in the first case, a peanut accidentally entered the trachea and obstructed the passageway of a three-year-old, who then had trouble breathing.
[FULL  STORY]

Taipower may appeal Taichung fines

PROCEDURAL FLAWS: While agreeing with Taichung’s decision on one pollution incident, the utility said the city did not give it time to respond to two other cases

Taipei Times
Date: Oct 29, 2019
By: Kao Shih-ching  /  Staff reporter

Taiwan Power Co (Taipower, 台電) is considering an appeal after the Taichung City Government fined it NT$60 million (US$1.96 million) for pollution by its Taichung Power Plant. Taipower cited procedural flaws in the decision.

The Taichung Environmental Protection Bureau earlier yesterday said tests showed that the coal-fired power plant had discharged wastewater containing high levels of the chemical boron.

In a test at one site on Sept. 19, wastewater from the plant’s Nos. 5 to 8 generators was found to contain 121mg per liter (mg/L) of boron — 24 times the regulatory limit of 5mg/L.

Two other tests at different sites on Thursday showed that wastewater from generators Nos. 1 to 4 and Nos. 9 to 10 contained 134mg/L and 141mg/L of boron respectively, or 26 and 28 times the limit, the bureau said in a statement.    [FULL  SORY]

Girl grabs ‘ghost’ and runs out of haunted house

A student was so scared she mistook ‘ghost’ for her friend and abandoned her to Halloween horrors

Taiwan News
Date: 2019/10/27
By: Alex Wu , Taiwan News, Staff Writer

(SET News from Weibo photo)

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) -Leaked security camera footage showing two university students visiting a haunted house in China’s Chongqing appears to show a young woman getting so scared that she grabs a “ghost” and runs out of the house, according to a SET news report.

The university student reportedly screamed at the top of her lungs and grabbed what she thought was her friend’s hand to pull her out of the haunted house. However, it turned out that she mistakenly took the hand of a haunted house employee who was pretending to be a ghost and had jumped in front of her.    [FULL  STORY]