Page Two

Collapsed building survivors hold 100-day memorial service

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/15
By: Yang Sz-ruei and Elizabeth Hsu

Taipei, May 15 (CNA) Many survivors of a housing complex that collapsed during an 201605150014t0001earthquake in Tainan in February, returned to the site of their former home Sunday for a memorial ceremony to mark the 100th day of the tragedy that took 115 human lives.

They brought sweets, dolls, fresh flowers and paper cranes they had folded by hand to the ceremony, leaving the objects on the ground along with cards, on which they wrote down words of deep sadness for the loss of their family members.

Sunday marked the 100th day since the death of her family members, said Liu Yi-chen (劉怡辰), chair of the Weiguan Jinlong Building Victims Families Association, who lost her husband and three children during the disastrous collapse on Feb. 6.

She wishes that they are all resting in peace in heaven, and that they can see them — the survivors — all alive and well now in the world, Liu said, expressing the hope that those in heaven pray for a good life for the living.

The debris of the collapsed building has already been removed, leaving a level, empty lot that is fenced and waiting for its future destiny.     [FULL  STORY]

Ko slams New Taipei City about-face

SCHOOL LUNCHES:Students, parents and teachers said Taipei finalized its plans for a Universiade dining space at their school without properly discussing it with them

Taipei Times
Date: May 16, 2016
By: Hsiao Ting-fang, Lee Ya-wen and Ho Shih-chang / Staff reporters

New Taipei City’s change of heart regarding a junior-high school sports field in the city’s Linkou

Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je, center, talks with a vendor at a traditional market festival at the Taipei Expo Park yesterday. Photo: Chang Chia-ming, Taipei Times

Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je, center, talks with a vendor at a traditional market festival at the Taipei Expo Park yesterday. Photo: Chang Chia-ming, Taipei Times

District (林口) slated to be used as the dining area for the 2017 Summer Universiade ran against the “moral principles of brotherhood,” Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je (柯文哲) said yesterday.
Ko said his government planned to convert the area in New Taipei City Municipal Linkou Junior High School into the restaurant for the event, which is to be hosted by Taipei in August next year.

“We took into consideration that the conversion of the facility into a dining space would cause some inconvenience for students during construction, which was why we earmarked a ‘good neighbor’ budget of NT$200 million [US$6.13 million] to help the school rebuild its badminton court, athletics field and basketball arena,” Ko said on the sidelines of a traditional market festival in Taipei yesterday afternoon.

“Waiting until after the budget has been allocated and related construction projects have been contracted out to tell us you do not want to lend us the space is an outright violation of the moral principles of brotherhood,” Ko said.

The Taipei City Government’s plan called for a large tent that could accommodate 3,500 people to be erected on the school’s campus, a project that would require pavement to be replaced and six months to complete.     [FULL  STORY]

Sheepskins For Sale in Southern Taiwan

Eye On Taiwan
Op Ed
Date: May 14, 2016
By: David Wang

Since the days of Confucius, Egyptian pharaohs and semi-evolved troglodytes and arguably Tyrannosaurus-Rex, all manners of bio-organisms have inherently engaged in oneupmanship to not only survive but often, as population rose and resources dwindled to intensify competition, vie for livelihoods that call for relatively less physical labor. After all and given a choice, most homo sapiens would opt for a desk job with enviable pay than a blue-collar trade as brick layer that could wreak havoc on one’s spine in the long term.

However it’s highly debatable if institutes of higher learning tracing its roots back to the days of Plato, Socrates were born because those doyens of profound thought were weaving lofty, esoteric theories to avoid plodding behind reeking buffalos or donkeys dragging plows in fields to cultivate maize.

Much has changed with the Ivory Tower culture over the millennia, but, according to an op-ed by a professor published in the Financial Times recently, the essential value of post-secondary education remains the same. At least with the schools that teach humanities and liberal arts but not the professional disciplines such as dentistry, medicine, information tech or computer science and mechanical engineering, whose graduates typically have more pragmatic pursuits in mind than to simply broaden one’s horizon and become educated people able to intelligently consider, discuss and respond to every issue under the sun.

But then came Vincent Tsong-Liang Huang, the president of the Nan Jeon University of Science and Technology located in southern Taiwan in an area whose name is transliterated as “Brine” or “Salty Water.” Its website, actually available in Chinese and English, impressively displays photos of the bigger-than-life campus structures, numbering maybe 2, in inexplicable multiples taken from various angles to obviously fill space and add to the wow factor.

Somehow such ego-stroking showmanship would not likely score points with even semi-serious post-secondary applicants to Columbia, Harvard, Yale, MIT. London School of Economics, Stanford and Wharton.

And the showmanship does not end with the NJUST’s website, its preeminent president, with enough formal educational credentials to humble the likes of Steven Spielberg (actually a high school dropout), Huang, appearing recently on Taiwanese TV not a day over 60, is clearly a die-hard fan of the Liberace School of Aesthetics, with overly-permed crown of hair jutting out like a springboard over his forehead to upstage The King.

Enigmatically Huang, despite praised on Taiwanese TV by one of the university’s staffers for being conscientious, is embroiled in one of the oldest scams in Taiwan if not on terra firma. A get-rich-quick scheme that would even embarrass whoever presented him with the “Kentucky Colonel” title, one of many listed on the website in addition to his Master of Science in Financial Engineering from the International University of Monaco.

The NJUST’s website, however, does not mention if Huang rubbed elbows with Prince Rainer and Grace Kelly while studying in Monaco, and if he shared insights on the timeless values of post-secondary education with the royal couple, in fluent English (the language of instruction at the IUM) and perhaps even French.

Huang also has a doctorate in electrical engineering from the National Taiwan University, said to be a top-ranked school in Taiwan, but apparently skipped out of the mechanical engineering classes involving transfer of static energy into kinetic energy, for he should know better than to drop the anvil on his own foot.

News aired May 13, 2016 on TV in Taipei says Huang and wife have raked in some US$187,500 over a few years by selling phony diplomas from fictitious universities and research papers (sold to lecturers who wish to be fast-tracked to tenured assistant profs or higher sans genuine effort) like hot microwave ovens out the back of a Chevy van.

And Huang, obviously making full use of his acumen gleaned from the Ph.D. in Business Administration from the NEUST State University, is a versatile educator as he even offers at his school The Department of Styling and Fashion Design, where students can learn the fine art of body painting.

Huang, besides raising eye-brows with his infantile, unimaginative scam, also bewilders observers for why would a man with apparently superhuman capacity to “acquire” a list of educational titles to outdo Mark Zuckerberg (a Harvard dropout) stoop to such degrading act? If money be the end of his means but cloaked in being provider of higher-education, then he is also guilty of being presumptuous or emperor-without-clothes, which suggests self-delusion and subpar intelligence.

This man with emphatic Elvis-hairdo-envy should have taken a page from Tony Ciabarra’s book.

The Aussie auto mechanic, a high school grad who probably can’t even spell summa-cum-laude, pronounce “occupe-toi de tes oignons” even with Chrtistine Lagarde holding his hand nor speak a word of Mandarin, came to Taipei in the late 1980s, after liquidating all he had, to dive headlong into Herbalife while living in a small hotel. In a matter of 5 years working 16-hour days, he built up a sizable downline to be a top distributor with current revenue of about US$80,000 monthly.

Furthermore, what does Huang’s behavior, maybe a Freudian Slip, say about his candid view of post-secondary education in Taiwan?

Actually decades ago a cartoonist may have echoed Huang’s sentiment with a stinging rendition that was published in a newspaper when he drew a roll of toilet paper of little squares of college diplomas separated by the unmistakable perforations.

Plenty of Taiwanese college-grads and many who have not had the good fortune, nor conventional wisdom, to go to university still question the value of post-secondary education for its return-on-investment or intrinsic value. While others believe the exam-based educational system in Taiwan, coupled with the traditional mindset among employers to prioritize hiring college grads, is a way to level the playing field especially for people from humble backgrounds.

As more cunning providers of higher education in Taiwan, as well as abroad, prey on the system and egos of yuppies in the Information Age to stamp out more gilded sheepskins clearly tagged with affordable prices, high-profile entrepreneurs and industrialists who have unquestionably contributed to improving socio-economic life on earth and for countless people, as Terry Guo of Hon Hai or Foxconn Tech Group (grad of a unremarkable vocational college in Taiwan) and Wang Yung-ching (junior-high grad), founder of the Formosa Plastics empire, Andrew Carnegie (founder of the American steel-making empire said to have never finished junior high), Henry Ford, and Martin Cooper (Motorola founder and inventor of the cellular phone), should be asked how much they’d pay for Huang’s forged diplomas or any from the NJUST.

Tsai’s speech unlikely to include 1992 Consensus

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-05-14
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – With less than a week left until President-elect Tsai Ing-wen’s May 20 6754632swearing-in, more speculation emerged Saturday that her inauguration speech will not include the disputed “1992 Consensus.”

Her Democratic Progressive Party has always rejected the claim that during talks in Hong Kong in 1992, delegations from Taiwan and China agreed that there was only one China, but that each side could have its own interpretation of what that one China amounted to. Kuomintang governments later termed the alleged agreement the “1992 Consensus,” but critics said China never mentioned the part of the formula about each side being allowed to have an interpretation of its own.

Former Tainan County Magistrate Su Huan-chih, a senior DPP politician, said Saturday that Tsai would not cross the line and acknowledge the existence of a “1992 Consensus.”

“She didn’t acknowledge it during the election campaign, so she is unlikely to acknowledge it during the inauguration,” Su said.     [FULL  STORY]

Maintaining the status quo benefits Taiwan, China, U.S.: MND

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/14
By: Claudia Liu and Christie Chen

Taipei, May 14 (CNA) Maintaining the status quo across the Taiwan Strait is in the interest of 201605140017t0001Taiwan, China and the United States, Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense (MND) said Saturday, in response to a Pentagon report released a day earlier.

In the U.S. Department of Defense’s annual report on China’s military power to Congress, the department said China’s continued efforts to develop and deploy military capabilities intended to coerce or invade Taiwan have posed “major challenges” to Taiwan’s security.

The report also said that the U.S. “opposes any unilateral change to the status quo in the Taiwan Strait by either side and does not support Taiwan independence” and “continues to support the peaceful resolution of cross-strait issues in a manner, scope, and pace acceptable to the people on both sides.”

In response, MND spokesman Maj. Gen. Luo Shou-he (羅紹和) cited the Pentagon’s report in 2015 as saying that the “formal declaration of Taiwan independence” and “undefined moves toward Taiwan independence” were two of the circumstances under which China had warned it would use force against Taiwan.     [FULL  STORY]

KMT to mediate if cross-strait ties falter: Hung

‘NOT SWORN ENEMIES’:The KMT chairwoman also accused the DPP of changing its stance on ractopamine after the election, and called ill-gotten assets ‘a false issue’

Taipei Times
Date: May 15, 2016
By: Loa Iok-sin / Staff reporter

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairwoman Hung Hsiu-chu (洪秀柱) yesterday said that her

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairwoman Hung Hsiu-chu, center, attends an ROC Women’s Association meeting in Kaohsiung yesterday. Photo: Tsai Chung-hua, Taipei Times

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairwoman Hung Hsiu-chu, center, attends an ROC Women’s Association meeting in Kaohsiung yesterday. Photo: Tsai Chung-hua, Taipei Times

party would mediate if cross-strait relations deteriorate after Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) president-elect Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) assumes office on Friday.

Meeting with female KMT members in Kaohsiung yesterday, Hung called on Tsai to pay special attention to cross-strait relations, as “it is the most important of all the issues that have major effects on the nation’s development.”

Hung also said that Tsai should pay equal attention to economic development, otherwise her administration might face serious consequences.

“If cross-strait relations deteriorate or move backward because the incoming government that is to take office on Friday holds a different view from the KMT’s, the KMT would not avoid the responsibility to help mediate and would not just sit and watch,” Hung said, adding that the DPP and the KMT are not sworn enemies, but merely two contestants in the same race.     [FULL  STORY]

DPP names NSC team

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-05-13
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – The Democratic Progressive Party on Friday announced the members 6754500for the National Security Council and the new presidential spokesman who will take office on May 20.

President-elect Tsai Ing-wen and Premier-designate Lin Chuan have already named about all the 40 members of the new Cabinet, but some minor officials and positions at the Presidential Office had not been announced yet.

The new presidential spokesman is Alex Huang, currently head of the DPP’s news and information department. The Presidential Office Building will not be a new environment for the 44-year-old, since he already worked there when DPP lawmaker Chen Chi-mai served as vice secretary-general under President Chen Shui-bian, reports said.     [FULL  STORY]

Presidential inauguration to be streamed live online

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/13
By: Lu Hsin-hui and Christie Chen

Taipei, May 13 (CNA) The inauguration ceremony for President-elect Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) and

The unveiling of the stage design for the inauguration ceremony, on May 8.

The unveiling of the stage design for the inauguration ceremony, on May 8.

Vice President-elect Chen Chien-jen (陳建仁) will be streamed live on the official website of the Presidential Office May 20, the ceremony’s preparatory committee announced Friday.

It will be the first time the Presidential Office website will give a live stream of a presidential inauguration and celebrations outside the office, said Lee Hou-ching (李厚慶), director of the Democratic Progressive Party’s media and creative center.

Tsai and Chen are scheduled be sworn in at the Ching-kuo Hall inside the Presidential Office at around 9 a.m., with incumbent President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) and Vice President Wu Den-yih (吳敦義) in attendance.

After the swearing-in ceremony, Tsai will preside over the swearing-in of the new premier, the secretaries-general of the Presidential Office and the National Security Council, and other top officials.     [FULL  STORY]

US says nations’ S China Sea claims are ‘excessive’

Taipei Times
Date: May 14, 2016
By: William Lowther / Staff reporter in WASHINGTON

The US Department of State has accused Taiwan and other countries of making “excessive maritime claims” in the South China Sea.

Office of press relations director Elizabeth Trudeau made the statement as she confirmed that the destroyer USS William P. Lawrence sailed within 12 nautical miles (22.2km) of the disputed Fiery Cross Reef (Yongshu Reef, 永暑島) earlier this week.

“The [US] Department of Defense conducted a freedom of navigation [exercises] in the South China Sea specifically in the region of Fiery Cross Reef and the Spratly Islands [Nansha Islands, 南沙群島] to uphold the rights and freedoms of all states under international law and to challenge excessive maritime claims,” she said.

“These excessive maritime claims are inconsistent with international law as reflected in the Law of the Sea covenant,” she added.

Fiery Cross Reef was a high tide feature occupied by China, but also claimed by Taiwan, the Philippines and Vietnam, she said.     [FULL  STORY]

Premier, Cabinet step down en masse

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-05-12
By: Chia Lee, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Chang led a mass resignation of his Cabinet after he called the final meeting Thursday

The government has officially entered a week-long caretaker period as Premier Simon Chang led the members of his Cabinet to resign en masse Thursday.

The government has officially entered a week-long caretaker period as Premier Simon Chang led the members of his Cabinet to resign en masse Thursday.

inpreparation for the handover to his successor Lin Chuan on May 20, when the new administration is sworn in.

President Ma appointed Simon Chang to head the Executive Yuan after approving the resignation of former Premier Mao Chi-kuo in the wake of the ruling Kuomintang’s (KMT) comprehensive defeat in the presidential and legislative elections on Jan 16.

When asked to assess his own performance during an interview, Chang said that he will leave it entirely to the people to judge his performance, and that he had felt more relaxed after tendering his resignation to President Ma Ying-jeou after the meeting.

Chang’s performance during the transitional period was rated highly due to his immediate reactions to a deadly earthquake that struck Tainan on Feb 6.     [FULL  STORY]