Page Two

Air conditioning back to normal at Taoyuan airport

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-06-05
By: George Liao, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

After the power outage at the Terminal 2 of the Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport exposing 6759507passengers and airline ground staff to a hot and un-air-conditioned environment since a thunder storm hit on Thursday, the air conditioning engines have begun to pump cool air into the structure since Sunday morning, the Taoyuan Airport Corporation (TAC) said Sunday.

The TAC said the ac engines began to pump cold air since midnight but stopped at 4 o’clock in the morning when operators reported abnormality in the cooling tower that had automatically caused the water pump to shut down.

After immediate repair, the circulating water cooling was turned back on and the air conditioning was back to normal at 6 a.m., the TAC said.

As of 7:30 a.m., cool temperatures were detected in the duty-free stores and the waiting and boarding area on the third floor and the food court in the basement, but the departure hall would need a little more time to get the temperature down due to its high structure and big area, the TAC said.     [FULL  STORY]

Temperatures to cool down in the coming week

Focus Taipei
Date: 2016/06/05
By: S.F. Wang and Flor Wang

Taipei, June 5 (CNA) Temperatures across Taiwan will be cooling down in the coming week, with 32661814high chances of thundershowers, the Central Weather Bureau said on Sunday.

On Sunday, there will be more rain in parts north of central Taiwan and in eastern Taiwan, with cloudier skies and lower temperatures than on Saturday, it said.

A heavy rain warning has been issued for Changhua and Yunlin counties.

Daytime highs in western Taiwan will reach 32-33 degrees and 30 degrees in eastern Taiwan, with lows to fall to 25-26 degrees for the day.     [FULL  STORY]

Tsai urges US to continue arms sales

BILATERAL COOPERATION:The president said the US’ commitment to military security has helped to maintain stability across the Taiwan Strait and in the Asia-Pacific region

Taipei Times
Date: Jun 06, 2016
By: Stacy Hsu / Staff reporter

President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) yesterday urged the US to continue to provide Taiwan with

US Senator John McCain, chairman of the US Senate Armed Services Committee, left, listens as President Tsai Ing-wen speaks during his visit to the Presidential Office Building in Taipei yesterday. Photo: CNA

US Senator John McCain, chairman of the US Senate Armed Services Committee, left, listens as President Tsai Ing-wen speaks during his visit to the Presidential Office Building in Taipei yesterday. Photo: CNA

necessary defensive weapons and reinforce the two nations’ bilateral cooperation on military security, as she met with a US congressional delegation led by US Senator John McCain to discuss issues of mutual interest to Taipei and Washington.

“It is the first time McCain visited Taiwan in his capacity as chairman of the US Senate Committee on Armed Services. It is also the first time in 24 years that a US delegation led by the head of the committee has come to Taiwan,” Tsai said during their meeting at the Presidential Office.

Expressing gratitude to McCain for his active support of Taiwan in the US Congress, Tsai said the veteran senator has offered assistance to Taiwan on multiple occasions by advocating Washington’s arms sale to Taipei and strengthening Taiwan-US cooperation on security.

Other senators in the delegation have also paid close attention to the cross-strait situation, Tsai said, adding that they have not only supported the US security committee to Taiwan based on the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA) and the “six assurances,” but have also called for assistance for Taiwan in relation to its broader participation in international organizations.     [FULL  STORY]

Short Take on Taiwan

Eye On Taiwan
Op-Ed¹
Date: June 6, 2016
By: David Wang

Would a graduate of Columbia, Stanford, Yale or Harvard invest in a street-vending business, not even as impressive nor nearly as large as a food truck in the USA, to sell the crispy-shelled pastry shaped like an inflated coin 6 centimeters in diameter filled with usually the options of red bean paste, turnip bits, creamy pudding about as innovative as peddling turquoise jewelry on American Indian reservations, albeit being a staple snack across Taiwan that would also quell hunger for anyone on a shoe-string budget?

One honorable graduate of the National Taiwan University, still said in the media and widely recognized in the country as the academic standard-bearer, has done just that, according to TV news aired June 5, 2016 in Taipei.

With Taiwanese media having consistently reported of stagnant wages over the last few years and university graduates on the island, except engineering graduates who are still paid half-decent wages, mainly fantasizing monthly starting pay exceeding US$1,500, and graduates with masters and PhDs mostly dreaming about paychecks nearing US$2,000 to awe-inspire even designers of Disneyland theme park rides, this NTU graduate apparently has more practical goals in mind than boldly joining a corporation to, for example, design an app to hail on-demand a harmonica-playing manicurist to make the world a better place.

Bills have to be paid on-time right?

Notwithstanding this graduate’s more prosaic concerns to stoop to engage in a pride-gnawing business typically reserved for Taiwanese without substantial job skills, college education or over-the-top marketing ideas to wow the likes of Dior, Tiffany and Louis Vuitton, he or she may have played hooky during the lectures on The Basics of Opportunity Cost.

For why would any Taiwanese youth who has managed to enter and graduate from the enviable NTU essentially forfeit the right to leverage the real value, not to mention its cachet, attached to the diploma after investing at least 4 years of one’s prime, as well as the tuition and any potential earnings forsaken as defined by Opportunity Cost?

Or maybe the holier-than-thou NTU isn’t such an admirable institute of higher learning as many Taiwanese would believe?

Just ask the likes of Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Ted Turner, Mark Zuckerberg, Ellen DeGeneres, who, among many other high-profile, world-changing figures who also saw the light before wasting more time and money in university, could have given this NTU graduate a few pointers.

Incidentally, the humble pastry-vending business will recoup for the NTU graduate any monetary investment in 2 years and generate monthly revenue easily 30 to 40 percent more than typical salaries paid his or her alums, without having to don stuffy, pretentious shirt-and-tie that also incurs extra cost.

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.

Tsai reaffirms self-reliant national defense

Taipei Times
Date: June 5, 2016
By: CNA

TAIPEI–President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) reaffirmed her administration’s determination to push

President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) waves during an inspection tour of a naval base in Suao, Yilan on Saturday, June 4. (CNA)

President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) waves during an inspection tour of a naval base in Suao, Yilan on Saturday, June 4. (CNA)

for a self-reliant national defense force when she boarded a domestically built warship off Yilan in Eastern Taiwan Saturday.

Following a May 29 inspection tour of air bases in Hualien, Eastern Taiwan — the first time in her capacity as commander in chief of the nation’s Armed Forces — she visited a naval base in Suao, Yilan and boarded the Tuo Jiang (沱江), Taiwan’s first locally developed stealth missile corvette that was commissioned in March 2015.

She said the nation will continue to promote the policy of building its own vessels.

“In addition to enhancing naval combat capacity, it will also help the development of the shipbuilding and machinery sectors, as well as system integration,” she said.

The government’s approach will be to make “demands for national defense the driving force of industrial upgrade and transformation,”Tsai said.

The government is bound to encounter numerous challenges in the pursuit of a self-reliant national defense force, however, she admitted.

“The path is not an easy one, but there is no return,” she told naval officers and cadets aboard the Tuo Jiang.     [FULL  STORY]

Tiananmen crackdown anniversary commemorated outside China

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-06-04
By: Christopher Bodeen, Associated Press

BEIJING (AP) — Commemorations were held in Taiwan and elsewhere ahead of the 27th

Visitors walk across Tiananmen Square in Beijing, Saturday, June 4, 2016. Saturday marks the 27th anniversary of China’s bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protests centered on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

Visitors walk across Tiananmen Square in Beijing, Saturday, June 4, 2016. Saturday marks the 27th anniversary of China’s bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protests centered on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

anniversary of China’s bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protests centered on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, while the government in China, where the incident remains a taboo topic, said it had long ago turned the page on the “political turmoil.”
Former student leader Wu’er Kaixi was joined by lawmakers outside Taiwan’s parliament on Friday to mark the June 4, 1989, military assault that left hundreds, possibly thousands, dead. Taiwan’s democratic politics and open society have long been a counterpoint to China’s authoritarian one-party system, which permits no discussion of the crackdown or memorials for the victims.

Wu’er said the Chinese government continues to prevent him from returning to China and bars his elderly parents from traveling to meet him and their grandson outside the country.

“This is what a so-called great nation has done to me,” Wu’er said. “We are facing a nasty and brutal China.”

Wu’er fled China after the crackdown, in which he was named the second most wanted among the student leaders. Unable to return home, he married a Taiwanese woman and settled on the island in 1996. Earlier this year he ran an unsuccessful campaign for a seat in the legislature.     [FULL  STORY]

Thousands mark Tiananmen anniversary in Hong Kong, Taipei vigils

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/06/04
By: Stanley Cheung and Christie Chen

Hong Kong, June 4 (CNA) Thousands of people attended a vigil in Hong Kong and hundreds 201606040029t0001attended one in Taipei on Saturday to mark the 27th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, calling for an end to one-party dictatorship in China.

Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China, which organized the Hong Kong event, urged Beijing to redress the wrongs of the massacre, stop its arrest of dissidents and transform China from a single-party Communist state to a democracy.

A wreath was laid and videos about the massacre were shown at the event at Hong Kong’s Victoria Park.

On the other side of the Taiwan Strait, a smaller vigil was organized at Taipei’s Liberty Square, drawing around 200 participants.     [FULL  STORY]

Ex-official urges Judicial Yuan closure

’DIFFICULT TASK’:Cheng Chung-mo recommended the establishment of a ‘pyramid structure’ for the justice system, with the base being the local lower district courts

Taipei Times
Date: Jun 05, 2016
By: Jason Pan / Staff reporter

Former Judicial Yuan vice president Cheng Chung-mo (城仲模) urged the government to initiate reforms to the justice system by abolishing the Judicial Yuan and bolstering lower courts by assigning more judges to district level courts.

He made the remarks at a seminar focused on “new concepts for judicial reform” organized by the Taiwan Law and Policy Research Foundation.

Cheng, chairman of the foundation, said that the Judicial Yuan must be abolished as a priority, as its role — of overseeing the entire courts system and judiciary officials — is superseded by the agency immediately below it, the Supreme Court.

“It is difficult for foreigners to fathom that our nation’s Supreme Court is under the jurisdiction of the Judicial Yuan. If it is called the Supreme Court, then why is there another judicial body above it?” Cheng said.

Following the transfer of power on May 20, Democratic Progressive Party and New Power Party lawmakers have been demanding the resignation of Judicial Yuan President Rai Hau-min (賴浩敏) and his deputy Su Yeong-chin (蘇永欽), but they have resisted calls and have not resigned so new appointments could be made by the government.     [FULL  STORY]

More than half satisfied with Tsai: poll

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-06-03
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Slightly more than half the Taiwanese were satisfied with the 6759052performance of their new president, Tsai Ing-wen, two weeks after she was sworn in, a poll commissioned by the Taiwan Thinktank showed Friday.

Tsai and her new administration were inaugurated on May 20, more than four months after she and her Democratic Progressive Party won a decisive election victory.

Tsai received the approval of 52.4 percent of respondents, with only 12.5 percent expressing negative views, according to the poll. When looking at regional results, Kaohsiung City and Penghu County gave her the highest positive ratings, up to 59 percent.

Premier Lin Chuan, who also took office on May 20, saw his approval at 47 percent, with 14.8 percent disapproving. His maximum level of 56.3 percent was reached in Tainan City, Chiayi City, Chiayi County and Yunlin County, the poll said, though Kaohsiung, Pingtung County and Penghu also gave him 54.4 percent.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan startup wins FbStart Apps of the Year Awards

Taiwan Today
Date: June 3, 2016

Taiwan startup VoiceTube is winner of FbStart Apps of the Year Awards, beating out more

Taiwan startup VoiceTube is winner of the FbStart Apps of the Year Awards announced at RISE startup conference May 28 to June 2 in Hong Kong. (Courtesy of Liberty Times)

Taiwan startup VoiceTube is winner of the FbStart Apps of the Year Awards announced at RISE startup conference May 28 to June 2 in Hong Kong. (Courtesy of Liberty Times)

than 1,000 teams from 89 countries and territories to claim the grand prize of US$50,000 in cash and US$50,000 in Facebook ad credits.

Announced at RISE startup conference May 28 to June 2 in Hong Kong, the honor is the first for a Taiwan outfit in the second edition of the annual awards launched by popular social network Facebook to help global startups grow and expand their business.

Halu Hsieh, chief operating officer and co-founder of VoiceTube, said the appeal of language learning helped the app stand out among the competition, and led to discussions between his company and Facebook on a strategic partnership.

“We are planning to expand our English-learning program to Japan because there is strong demand there,” he said, “Based on that experience, we may develop other programs for other languages in the future.”     [FULL  STORY]