Page Two

Tsai, Abe’s mother enjoy NHK concert in Taipei

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/06/03
By: P.C. Tang and Flor Wang

Taipei, June 3 (CNA) Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) attended a performance of the 21258054NHK Symphony Orchestra in Taipei on Friday, along with Yoko Abe, the mother of Japan’s Premier Shinzo Abe — in what is widely seen as Tsai and Premier Abe’s affirmation of the importance they place in building closer ties between their governments.

Tsai arrived at the National Concert Hall before Yoko Abe, who was accompanied by Mikio Numata, chief representative of the Taipei Office of Japan’s Interchange Association.

The two took their seats in a low profile manner three minutes before the concert started, but they interacted closely by talking to each other during the performance.

During the intermission, Tsai and Yoko Abe headed to the rest zone together. Upon leaving her seat, Tsai waved to the nearby audience who greeted her enthusiastically.     [FULL  STORY]

KMT unhappy at response to demands

‘EVASIVE’:Premier Lin Chuan reiterated the response in his report, leaving the KMT ‘disappointed’ that he said the Okinotori atoll EEZ issue required a ruling by the UN

Taipei Times
Date: Jun 04, 2016
By: Alison Hsiao / Staff reporter

The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) caucus yesterday said it was not satisfied with Premier

Premier Lin Chuan dons virtual-reality headgear during a legislative session at the request of New Power Party Legislator Huang Kuo-chang yesterday during a legislative meeting. Photo: Wang Yi-sung, Taipei Times

Premier Lin Chuan dons virtual-reality headgear during a legislative session at the request of New Power Party Legislator Huang Kuo-chang yesterday during a legislative meeting. Photo: Wang Yi-sung, Taipei Times

Lin Chuan’s (林全) responses to their three demands, based on which they occupied the podiums in the legislature’s general assembly chamber to block legislative proceedings on Tuesday.

The premier was able to present his policy report to the legislature yesterday, following his failed attempt on Tuesday, when KMT lawmakers boycotted Lin’s report.

In the latest version of the report provided yesterday, responses to the three demands tabled by the KMT caucus on Tuesday — not to allow the import of US pork with ractopamine, not to allow the import of products from the five Japanese prefectures that were affected by radioactive fallout from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant disaster in March 2011 and to ensure Taiwanese fishermen’s rights are protected in disputed waters near the Okinotori atoll claimed by Japan — were added.

The responses reiterated the Executive Yuan’s response on Wednesday.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan urges China to heal Tiananmen wounds

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/06/02
By: Chen Chia-lun and Christie Chen

Taipei, June 2 (CNA) Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) called on China to 201606020032t0001heal the wounds of the Tiananmen Square massacre and build a more open and just society on Thursday, two days ahead of the 27th anniversary of the crackdown in Beijing.

“We would like to reiterate that freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law are a way of life and universal values cherished by people around the world,” MAC Deputy Minister Chiu Chui-cheng (邱垂正) said at a press conference, in response to questions about Beijing’s detainment of dissidents and rights activists ahead of the anniversary.

“We hope that the historical wounds of the June Fourth incident can be faced and healed, so that they become a positive force to move (the society) forward, and to build a more open, fair, just and harmonious society,” Chiu said.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan’s top energy firm eyes continued growth as it turns 70

Taiwan News
Date: June 2, 2016

CPC Corp., Taiwan’s foremost energy company and largest state-owned

CPC Corp., Taiwan’s largest energy company and operator of almost 80 percent of the gas stations in Taiwan, held an event to celebrate the 70th anniversary of its establishment June 1 in Taipei. (Courtesy of CPC Corp.)

CPC Corp., Taiwan’s largest energy company and operator of almost 80 percent of the gas stations in Taiwan, held an event to celebrate the 70th anniversary of its establishment June 1 in Taipei. (Courtesy of CPC Corp.)

enterprise by revenue, held a celebration in honor of its 70th anniversary June 1 at its headquarters in Taipei City during which the firm highlighted its corporate social responsibility programs and efforts to bolster the nation’s energy security.

“The company will expand its oil exploration programs around the world to increase ownership of oil sources so Taiwan will be better prepared for the impacts of price fluctuations,” said Paul Chen, president of CPC. He added it intends to raise the percentage of crude oil from CPC-owned sources at its refineries from 4 to 10 percent within the next several years.

According to its president, the state-owned enterprise is also working to diversify Taiwan’s energy sources by facilitating greater access to liquefied natural gas, which produces less carbon emissions than traditional fossil fuels. “The company is building facilities that will enable it to import larger quantities of LNG, which is in line with the government’s policy of reducing the use of nuclear power in Taiwan,” he said.     [FULL  STORY]

US Senate to debate bill on Taiwan

Taipei Times
Date: Jun 03, 2016
By: William Lowther / Staff reporter in WASHINGTON

The US Senate is next week to debate a US$574.5 billion defense spending bill that calls for improved military relations with Taiwan.
US Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain is in Taipei this week and is expected to support the provisions on Taiwan.

If the provisions pass and the bill is ratified, it would constitute the most significant congressional upgrade to US-Taiwan relations since the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act (TRA), senior fellow at the International Assessment and Strategy Center Rick Fisher told the Taipei Times.

The bill calls on the Pentagon to improve military relations with Taiwan by starting a program that would exchange senior military officers and officials on a regular basis.

According to the bill — if passed by the committee — the exchange officers and officials would focus on threat analysis, military doctrine, force planning, logistical support and intelligence collection and analysis.     [FULL  STORY]

If It Looks like Baked Beans, Then It Must Be

Eye On Taiwan
Op-Ed¹
Date: June 2, 2016
By: David Wang

Information overload is a phenomenon that has been talked about since the 1970s and a problem that obviously has only grown exponentially with the Internet, blogs, websites, smartphones, all of which are now also carriers of massive volumes of information. But some things never change and that is the quality of information, the kind that consumers, the public can count on as reliable, factual to make informed, optimal decisions to, hopefully, improve quality of life.

But at least one seasoned observer has commented online that the Internet, despite being a miraculous, modern invention to connect the world to enable sharing of information, is also a vast wasteland of questionable information (aka garbage), including news and advertising; while websites tend to be a convenient, deceptive tool to make many businesses seem bigger than life.

In short, the Internet may also be likened to, without offending the original creators of the concept and later parties who have tweaked the software and hardware to make it usable for millions worldwide, an galactically large public toilet down which the global population can flush just about anything.

But the news media in Taiwan, including the operators of cable TV channels, has irrefutably “profited” from the Internet, especially to enable them to cut cost by minimizing labor-intensive, costly investigative reporting, including personal interviewing and undercover work, to enlighten the public of truly influential, urgent news.

And it’s obvious to anyone regularly watching the cable news channels 50 through 56 in Taiwan that the operators’ motto is definitely not earnest, professional journalism, but a perfunctory, childish game of filling airtime while watching the clock.

Fresh news content of local events aired daily lasts maybe a few minutes, consisting of mostly video-caught traffic accidents, petty crimes as violent assaults, thefts, fires, while all the channels seem to agree to share content daily as the same news is circulated like a merry-go-round from one station to the next. The flooding of terminal 2 at the Taoyuan International Airport due to the downpour on June 2, 2016 was, for example, first aired on one channel and then spread like a bad flu to all the other cable stations, none of which bother to dispatch a reporter on-site to scope out more revealing details.

In fact Taiwanese TV news media, perhaps due to tight budget, rarely send any reporter to dig out locally interesting, informative content. For example, it would have been well within a dedicated, professional reporter’s range and milieu to have discovered something wayward in the structure of that condo tower before it collapsed due to the quake in southern Taiwan.

Instead there is clearly a streak of laziness, indifference among Taiwanese reporters to do the minimum. Which may be why there are so many on-site reports of small diners, cuisine for such coverage calls for juvenile level of technical expertise, which likely does not exist among Taiwanese reporters.

And the adoption of foreign correspondents and Taiwanese reporters based abroad to cover news on-site is even less frequent than the Black Friday sale stateside. Only one Taiwanese TV station seems to have a reporter based in Washington, DC who is occasionally seen to make a cameo appearance.

For example has a single Taiwanese TV station sent one of its own to cover the disastrous flooding in Texas, the massive forest fire in Fort McMurray, Alberta or the ongoing Syrian migrant crisis in Greece and Germany? Or has any Taiwanese media, as a professional outfit should, tried to post someone in SE Asia and China to investigate and break news related to the hundreds of Taiwanese scammers who have been busted in Malaysia, the Philippines and China?

Airing breaking news that has happened abroad by Taiwanese media seems exclusively someone else’s business. If scavenging news online from whatever sources available works, then why sweat it seems the mantra for Taiwanese news media. Verification of factual content is but a trivial detail that can be overlooked of course.

Or it could be due to lack of talent? As shown by the recently aired interview between a “seasoned” female Taiwanese reporter and the British entrepreneur Dyson that mostly exposed her incompetence in not only her English skill but her lack of preparation, when she even failed to understand the core breakthrough of Dyson’s vacuum cleaner.

But could it be a matter of professional ethics or lack thereof? That Taiwanese news media is simply trying to survive on cruise control. Why bother investing in on-site reporting when so much news is available for free via the Internet?

Besides it’s so convenient to rerun dated news, as seen on the morning of June 2, 1016 when one of the cable TV channels in Taipei aired a video of a Chinese customer insulted at a donut shop in the USA that had been shown months ago. Short-lived memory among consumers of the Information Age works wonders for cunning news broadcasters in Taiwan indeed.

So it’s evident that airing news of original content related to Taiwan and abroad is a low priority for Taiwanese news media, who also don’t care about factual content since they are merely rebroadcasting whatever news content they can get their hands on (mostly scavenged online), without knowing, nor care to know, the factual quality of such source.

For example, an irresponsible, junior reporter from Tijuana, Mexico is lucky to be sent on a cushy gig (junket) to cover the Indy 500 and files a report saying “drivers ride on slicks or racing tires without tread during rain to go faster by hydroplaning,” which would be copied and aired perfunctorily as “news” by Taiwanese media, whose reporters most likely don’t know “drafting” on a racetrack from a mechanical “drafting” pencil.

In other words, if a news “source” is shoveling loads of baked beans onto the Internet that look like baked beans, then the stuff must be fully trustworthy as genuine, edible and nutritious, without having to smell and bearing the density of baked beans.

Without as much alimentary metaphor, Taiwanese news media seems complacent to “source” online and elsewhere both video and textual content without verification to mostly fill airtime and demand for information that looks like “news.” Supplying and broadcasting secondhand news, without even citing the source frequently, is obviously acceptable “professional standard” in Taiwan.

And such mode of reporting and journalism seems also “acceptable” for at least one Taiwan-based operator of a well-known, branded website of information tech news.

This firm has a want ad on one of the job sites in Taiwan looking for a fully-English-literate person to “source” news, presumably online, over an 8-hour afternoon shift to then publish on its own site, including graphics work as making up tables and proofing copies (aka polishing the English).

The want ad does not ask for any other qualifications as even a modicum of IT knowledge, so this candidate, like the above-mentioned hypothetical Mexican reporter still wet behind the ears, only has to cut and paste IT-related news sourced online as its own, without knowing if such content is factual.

What’s wrong with distributing baked beans online as long as it looks like the crud? And if it has passed the expiry date, so be it.

¹Eye 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.

Labor minister denies July wage hike

Taiwan News
Date: Taiwan News
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Labor Minister Kuo Fong-yu on Wednesday denied reports that he would 6758565raise the basic hourly wage in July.

At present, the official basic minimum wage stands at NT$20,008 (US$613.5) per month and the hourly wage at NT$120 (US$3.67). However, since the official working time has been cut from 84 hours per fortnight to 40 hours per week, the hourly wage would be expected to rise to NT$126 (US$3.86).

The issue of minimum wage hikes would be discussed by the relevant committee beginning June 6, and if representatives of labor, employers, the government and academics reached a consensus, their decision would be handed over to the Cabinet, Kuo said.

If the recommendation was for a rise of the minimum wages, this would be handled by a review committee meeting during the third quarter of the year, the minister said, making a July hike unrealistic.     [FULL  STORY]

Taipei confirms cluster of TB infection at NTNU

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/06/01
By: Ku Chuan and Kay Liu

Taipei, June 1 (CNA) A cluster outbreak of tuberculosis (TB) infection is confirmed to have taken place

(CNA file photo)

(CNA file photo)

in National Taiwan Normal University (NTNU), with eight people showing symptoms, the Taipei City Department of Health said Wednesday.

The university reported a confirmed TB case last December and a follow-up skin test of 176 people in close contact with the patient found 68 of them had been infected, according to the department.

Those who have tested positive may just have a latent infection, may never develop the disease and cannot spread the TB bacteria, but preventive treatments were given to the 68 people who have been exposed, the department said.

Two more confirmed cases were reported by the university — one in March, the other in May — and tests showed they were infected with the same strain of the TB bacteria found in the patient reported in December.     [FULL  STORY]

Cabinet says it will protect food safety and fishermen

KMT PROTEST RESPONSE:Food safety regulations are to be based on science, radiation-affected foodstuffs are still banned and maritime disputes are to be settled peacefully

Taipei Times
Date: Jun 02, 2016
By: Alison Hsiao / Staff reporter

The Executive Yuan yesterday responded at a news conference to the three demands listed by the

Left to right, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Leo Lee, Cabinet spokesman Tung Chen-yuan, Minister of Health and Welfare Lin Tzou-yien and Deputy Minister of Agriculture Chen Chi-chung attend a press conference at the Executive Yuan in Taipei yesterday. Photo: Lo Pei-der, Taipei Times

Left to right, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Leo Lee, Cabinet spokesman Tung Chen-yuan, Minister of Health and Welfare Lin Tzou-yien and Deputy Minister of Agriculture Chen Chi-chung attend a press conference at the Executive Yuan in Taipei yesterday. Photo: Lo Pei-der, Taipei Times

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) caucus during its protest at the Legislative Yuan in Taipei on Tuesday: for the Cabinet to reject ractopamine-laced US pork, to reject Japanese food products from radiation-affected regions and to protect fishermen’s rights in the disputed waters near the Okinotori atoll.

The KMT caucus blocked Premier Lin Chuan (林全) from presenting his policy platform to the legislature on Tuesday, while demanding that the premier sign a pledge concerning the above-mentioned issues.

The Executive Yuan’s news conference was attended by officials from the three relevant agencies — the Ministry of Health and Welfare, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Council of Agriculture (COA) — in response to the KMT’s calls.

Executive Yuan spokesperson Tung Chen-yuan (童振源) said the government has a “clear attitude” on its determination to safeguard food safety, to which issues regarding US pork and Japanese food products from the radiation-affected regions are related.    [FULL  STORY]

Wena is Hardly the Jane Tamad in Taipei

Eye On Taiwan
Op-Ed
Date: June 1, 2016
By: David Wang

Those who surf the Net to find blogs and websites related to the Philippines won’t have to look far to read plenty of politically-incorrect, candid and unfortunately truthful comments, observations and insights about that nation, whose iconic soul may be animated by the Filipino soap opera character Juan Tamad (Lazy John). While one American living in the Philippines with a Filipina wife said seriously on a blog that Filipinos with some money will party first before paying bills.

Can you blame most Filipinos for wanting to chill out rather than dive headlong into earnest work? A 30ish cabbie in Manila said that he sometimes makes nothing in a 12-hour shift and sometimes only US$11 after a long day that starts at 7:00 a.m. and ends at 10 p.m.; while a 20-something salesperson and an insurance claims clerk in Manila are paid only about US$260 monthly to enable them to live hand-to-mouth after paying rent, food, transportation and parental support, without being able to save a dime even into their 40s.

Such seeming hopelessness could partly explain the epidemic proportion of single motherhood in the Philippines, to which a pretty Filipina in Angeles City once attributed young Filipinos being “assholes,” who could be forced by circumstance beyond their control (read overpopulation due to anachronistic religious doctrine, governmental corruption to sap the nation of promising job opportunities for most residents) to behave irresponsibly, recklessly and wantonly to seek instant gratification by whispering whatever works into ears of young, naïve Filipinas that result in unwanted pregnancy and inevitable abandonment.

But obviously not all Filipinas and Filipinos have thrown in the towel in the face of bleak prospects. For hundreds of thousands of them migrate abroad as overseas Filipino workers to overcome the odds back home, to also show that many Filipinos are not embodiments of Juan Tamad.

Wena Irinco, about to turn 25 in June and as shown, is clearly one Filipina who won’t simply sit to wait for coconuts to fall.

Wena Irinco

Wena Irinco

A child of a Chinese mom and pinoy or Filipino, Wena has Filipino citizenship due to birthright and will be given a Taiwanese ID card after one year of residency in Taipei, where she has been working a few months as a sales clerk in a 3C (computing, communication and consumer) retailer that sells mobile phone cases, smartphones, and prepaid phone cards, in an area in central Taipei that is home to many small businesses catering to mainly overseas Filipino workers.

Many people don’t know that you can hold dual citizenship (Taiwan and the Philippines)…and I don’t want to give up my Filipino citizenship to save money on the visa needed to return to the Philippines, says Wena, who was gracious enough to be interviewed while behind the counter on the job.

While unlike countless children in the Philippines born of parents who are too poor to even care for themselves, Wena has been lucky to have a father, an ex-chef but now retired, and mom, who worked in a shoe business among other jobs in the Philippines, who have provided support and put her through the University of the East in Manila, where she graduated from a 4-year computer science program.

Incidentally Wena’s mom also has a better life in Taipei, besides being paid relatively higher wages, for she at least is treated equally as a card-carrying citizen, but not so in the Philippines where she pays a nominal fee yearly to stay as an alien, despite many years of residency.

But she shares a common thread that knits increasingly more Filipinos together, which is being a child out of wedlock, and calls being an illegitimate child “normal” in her homeland. Is she also implying that all the children born of married parents globally are abnormal?

Being relatively too young and insulated from the many socioeconomic ills beleaguering the Philippines, Wena, besides confessing to having little time to read except occasionally staying up-to-date on viral news via Facebook, is hardly the person to rely on for an insider’s look at what makes her homeland tick.

She likely does not know nor care to analyze the reasons for the indifference many Filipinos, including her parents, show towards marriage, not least of which being the contract only binds two parties, many of whom struggle financially to have little control over their future and location of residency due to necessity to work abroad for many years, that is very costly to dissolve. Some couples end up spending US$7,000 or more on a divorce or easily 19 times a typical monthly salary in the Philippines.

Emphatically expressing her goal in life being to make and save money, which does not set her apart from all the OFWs in Taiwan, Wena is also lucky to have a Chinese mom, who works in a printed circuit board factory in Taipei for the relatively higher wages, whose ancestry not only allows her to migrate to Taiwan to easily acquire local citizenship, but also enable Wena to do the same.

To hold Taiwanese citizenship in Wena’s case has tangible value. She was only paid about US$440 monthly in her job as a QCA clerk in Manila where she had to gaze into a computer monitor to proofread financial statements, but grosses about US$770 monthly at the 3C retailer where she has little to do except wait for walk-in customers, take inventory and reorder stock. OFWs working in factories in Taiwan gross about US$550 monthly.

Working life in Manila for Wena, her first job after university graduation, was less pleasant compared to hers in Taipei, for she had to buy meals in Manila, but not now as mom takes care of such routine.

Her life in Manila has not changed from the one in Taipei in that Wena still pays for parental support, as does most OFWs. I send about half of my salary to dad and share in the expenses to rent our house in Xinzhuang, an area about 30 minutes by MRT from the 3C retailer, says Wena.

Wena, also not too different from OFWs in Taiwan, aims to have her own house one day without knowing in which nation to realize such dream. When told of the home prices in the area where she works, with a new condo twice the size of the modestly-sized retailer going for maybe US$300,000, Wena suddenly woke up to the reality that her future home will likely be in the Philippines, where she says a house and lot in Cavite (an area about an hour from central or downtown Manila) is available for US$22,000. That is perfect for Wena is adamant to have a single-detached home, which is essentially a fantasy for someone like her in Taipei without hitting a jackpot in a major lottery as El Gordo.

Wena also dreams of setting up a business one day, as so many of her compatriots, in case she can’t find work. Maybe I’ll get involved in food and beverage because my father was a chef and can show me the ropes, says Wena.

Besides showing ignorance of property prices in Taipei, Wena also displays a degree of naivete towards life in the city, where she joyfully labels as being safe for a woman to walk alone, a view that could be skewed by her having seen a purse snatching in Manila. But her perspective may be readjusted for reality in Taipei if told that a purse snatching occurred only a couple blocks from her retailer recently, and that a Taiwanese woman in Kaohsiung, the major city in southern Taiwan, said that all her friends have had theirs grabbed by snatchers.

Wena’s sanguine view of security in Taipei is understandable as she can’t read Chinese nor comprehend spoken Mandarin beyond the kindergarten level, so does not watch TV news of Taiwan to live in a cocoon of sorts. Ignorance is bliss indeed.

My mom tells me to upgrade my Chinese reading, listening and writing skills that would help my employability in Taipei, says Wena, whose current job certainly does not motivate her to beef up her Chinese literacy, especially considering that her boss hired her as-is to obviously work in a location serving mostly OFWs.

Unbeknownst to Wena, who admits to having studied basic Chinese in Manila as a child and says her mom speaks Mandarin with undetermined fluency, achieving adult-level Chinese speaking, listening and writing skills at her age, given the financial resources and quality time available to her, would be as realistic a feat as trying to upstage by imitation Andy William’s rendition of The Impossible Dream.

Despite being an hour and half by plane from the land of her birth and physically in Taipei due to mainly a better paying job, Wena has heart strings tied to the Philippines, where her boyfriend awaits. He wishes to marry me but I have different goals in life, says Wena.