Taichung drink shop suspended due to ‘roach egg’ in drinkBy Huang Hsu-lei and Esme Yeh / Staff reporter, with staff writerA drink shop in Taichung’s Yizhong Street Commercial Area (一中商圈) was suspended yesterday after a customer said they found a cockroach egg in their drink. The customer, surnamed Lin (林), said she bought a drink from the shop on Saturday and felt a strange substance while sipping her beverage. People walk along the Yizhong Street Commercial Area in Taichung in an undated photograph. The shop refunded the order and made her another drink, but Lin said she did not dare drink it. The Taichung Office of Food and Drug Safety yesterday said it had dispatched personnel to inspect the shop.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
Kenting tourism sees second year of historic lowsBy Tsai Tsung-hsien and Sam Garcia / Staff reporter, with staff writerTourism in Kenting fell to a historic low for the second consecutive year last year, impacting hotels and other local businesses that rely on a steady stream of domestic tourists, the latest data showed. A total of 2.139 million tourists visited Kenting last year, down slightly from 2.14 million in 2024, the data showed. Uni-Resort Kenting has closed, while Fullon Hotel Kenting, one of the largest hotels in the area, has temporarily closed for large-scale renovations. Kenting National Park Headquarters Deputy Director Tseng Tien-ting (曾添丁) said they released a plan to develop tourism this year. Kenting is a natural wonder that should not be diminished by short-term data, Pingtung County’s Transportation and Tourism Division said.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
Urologist warns of cold-related health risksWATCH OUT: Low temperatures do not just make people feel ‘cold,’ but also bring risks to the heart, blood pressure, urination, joints, immunity and emotions, a urologist saidBy Lin Chih-yi / Staff reporterAs Taiwan is experiencing waves of cold snaps, physicians have shared health risks brought about by lower temperatures and protective measures the public could take. A graphic shows 10 cold weather health risks and corresponding protective measures. He also warned of rising blood pressure and increased cardiovascular risks, such as heart attacks or strokes, as low temperatures cause blood vessels to constrict. Staying warm, drinking sufficient water, not holding in urine and moving slowly are important health guidelines for cold days, he added. Tri-Service General Hospital cardiology director Tsai Tsung-neng (蔡宗能) said low temperatures increase the risks of fatal cardiovascular conditions, including heart attacks and cardiogenic shock.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
Lai touts Taiwan’s smart healthcare‘DIVINE MOUNTAINS’: The president said he hoped the integration of healthcare and technology could push the nation to become even more globally competitiveBy Lee I-chia / Staff reporterThe “Healthy Taiwan Sprout Project” launched last year has approved funding worth NT$2.94 billion (US$93.05 million) for 197 smart healthcare projects, President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday, adding that he hoped to see healthcare and technology integration become the next “divine mountains” maintaining Taiwan’s international competitiveness. The forum, which started in 2017, has a clear mission to implement the nation’s healthcare policies and engage in frontline medical services, Lai said, adding that it has become a vital platform promoting Taiwan’s healthcare industry. President William Lai speaks at the opening ceremony of the 19th Nobel Health Care Forum in Taipei yesterday. Photo: Fang Pin-chao, Taipei TimesCross-sector collaboration — especially the integration of healthcare and technology — diversified topics reflecting the medical community’s continuous efforts to push for innovative health management, and the implementation of smart healthcare solutions contributed to the forum’s success, he said. It also includes smart healthcare, Lai said, adding that NT$2.94 billion in funding for 197 smart healthcare projects has been approved since last year, mainly for optimizing clinical workflows and improving service efficiency, he added.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
KMT chairwoman quiet on reported summit with CCPStaff writer, with CNAChinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun (鄭麗文) has remained tight-lipped on a reported summit with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) late this month and a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), saying only that any talks would “not be conducted in secret.”Online news site Meihua Media on Friday reported that the KMT and the CCP are set to resume their long-suspended dialogue — the Cross-Strait Economic, Trade and Culture Forum, better known as the “KMT-CCP Forum” — from Jan. 27 to 29 in Beijing. The KMT delegation would be led by party Vice Chairman Hsiao Hsu-tsen (蕭旭岑), the report said, citing anonymous sources. Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun, center, speaks to reporters in Taichung on Saturday. Cheng said that she had sensed a spirit of “sincerity and goodwill” from Beijing regarding cross-strait communication since she became KMT chair in November last year, prompting the KMT to prepare for resumed exchanges. Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) spokesman Lee Kuen-cheng (李坤城) dismissed Cheng’s plan to revive the KMT-CCP Forum as a move to “test the waters” for a potential meeting with Xi.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
Taiwan needs to bolster its legal framework, inter-ministerial cooperation and societal resistance to face China’s cognitive warfare, Tunghai University Cross-Strait Research Center deputy executive director Hung Pu-chao (洪浦釗) said. “We cannot use laws from the analog era to fight cognitive warfare in the digital age,” Hung said. China does not need to convince everyone, heightening political polarization alone achieves its cognitive warfare goals, he said. Cognitive security can no longer be the responsibility of just national security agencies, but needs to involve cooperation between multiple ministries, he said. When the public sees through China’s cognitive warfare, it acts as a “social vaccine,” weakening disinformation and embedding cognitive security into democratic defense, he said.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
The laws aim to prevent foreign vessels from falsifying their identities, concealing sailing routes, severing undersea cables and engaging in other illegal activities, said the Executive Yuan, which proposed the amendments. Those who damage meteorological facilities, undersea cables or other infrastructure face fines ranging from NT$2 million to NT$100 million, depending on the offense. The measures were introduced after several incidents last year involving foreign vessels severing undersea cables or lingering in Taiwan’s offshore waters, raising national security concerns. Under the Commercial Port Act amendments, port operators, the Maritime and Port Bureau or designated authorities may order vessels to leave a commercial port within three months or relocate if their presence interferes with berth scheduling or port safety. The remaining five amended laws, including to the Meteorological Act, target those who steal, damage or unlawfully interfere with facilities related to meteorology, undersea cables, power generation, natural gas or water supply.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
TPP chair leads delegation to USBy Lo Kuo-chia / Staff reporter, with CNATaiwan People’s Party (TPP) Chairman Huang Kuo-chang (黃國昌) late yesterday afternoon departed for Washington, where he said he is scheduled to meet with US government officials to discuss arms procurement and tariffs. “Aside from receiving two A4 pages and seeing seven articles, the amount of information we have been able to obtain is so little it is hard to even describe,” he said. Taiwan People’s Party Chairman Huang Kuo-chang, center, speaks to reporters at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport yesterday. The trip came as a surprise to many, as it was not announced until the TPP briefed the press on it earlier yesterday afternoon. Huang said, however, that the visit had been arranged for “quite some time” after discussions with the US side.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
Man drowns in a public hot spring pool in TaianBy Peng Chien-li, Weng Yu-huang and Fion Khan / Staff reporters, with staff writerA 73-year-old man yesterday drowned at a public hot spring pool at the Taian Police Light Villa in Miaoli County, police said. The entrance to a public hot spring pool at the Taian Police Light Villa in Miaoli County is pictured in an undated photograph. The villa, in Taian Hot Spring, is a popular destination for police officers. While the resort primarily serves police personnel, its public pool is open to the public. Entering a high-temperature pool too quickly could cause rapid vasodilation, while repeatedly alternating between hot and cold pools could lead to sharp fluctuations in blood pressure, he said.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
Demonstrators call for enforcement of death penaltyBy Esme Yeh / Staff reporterDemonstrators in a march on Justice Day yesterday called for the enforcement of the death penalty to protect children’s right to life, ahead of the sentencing in a child abuse trial. The march was held by children’s rights advocates, along with the National Association of Equality for Life, Taiwan. People hold up signs during a march in Taipei yesterday calling for the enforcement of the death penalty. Photo: Liao Chen-huei, Taipei TimesThey chanted “anti-death penalty alliance, get out of Taiwan” when they passed by the operating site of the Taiwan Alliance to End the Death Penalty on Zhenjiang Street. Wang Hung-wei said the death penalty has been de facto abolished since Constitutional Judgement No.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
Budget too important to break up, Cabinet saysBy Chen Yu-fu / Staff reporter, with CNAThe overall central government budget is too closely interconnected to only pass parts of it piecemeal, Executive Yuan spokeswoman Michelle Lee (李慧芝) said yesterday, urging opposition lawmakers to swiftly review the budget. Opposition legislators have said they are dissatisfied that the Executive Yuan did not “properly” adjust military and police pay. Commuters pass a TPass billboard at an MRT station in an undated photograph. Photo: Taipei TimesThe Executive Yuan’s proposed general budget was formulated in accordance with its policy planning, taking into account all facets of the budget, Lee said. The Cabinet hopes the legislature considers these issues carefully and begins the budget review so that all policies that benefit the nation and Taiwanese can be implemented as scheduled, she said.
Source:Taipei Times
January 11, 2026 16:05 UTC
Trio sentenced for torturing Taichung man to deathBy Hsu Kuo-chen, Chen Chien-chih and Jason Pan / Staff reportersTaichung gaming business owner Liu Shih-hui (劉世惠) was on Friday sentenced by citizen judges to life in prison for kidnapping and torturing a man to death. In the case, which was heard in the Taichung District Court, the citizen judges reviewed evidence, including videos taken by perpetrators. A Taichung prosecutor said that the victim, surnamed Hsu (許), 28, was assaulted repeatedly, and his body was covered with wounds and bruises. The citizen judges handed down the maximum punishment for the perpetrators. While Liu was sentenced to life in prison, Shih Ting-chang (石庭彰), 19, was sentenced to 12 years, and Liu Chi-yun (劉季昀), 37, was sentenced to 13 years and six months.
Source:Taipei Times
January 10, 2026 17:16 UTC
Economist warns of ‘K’-shaped growth amid AI boomIMBALANCE: ’K’-shaped growth refers to a divergence of performance in different sectors, with some moving higher and some lower, with the graph resembling a ‘K’Staff writer, with CNADespite Taiwan’s per capita GDP forecast to top US$40,000 this year amid the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, an economist warned of “K”-shaped industrial growth, which would result in low wages in certain domestic demand-oriented industries. Dachrahn Wu (吳大任), director of National Central University’s Research Center for Taiwan Economic Development, said that Taiwan’s economy is largely driven by exports in the AI era, but the performance has diverged in a “K” shape. As the service sector serves as the largest employer in Taiwan, with the “K”-shaped development continuing, the impact on the sector would run deeper, Wu said. The first priority is to turn the service sector around, he said. Such efforts are needed to support domestic demand-oriented industries to have the entire industrial development tilt toward a balance, Kao said.
Source:Taipei Times
January 10, 2026 17:15 UTC
Lack of land curbs social housing: MOILEASE FOCUS: The ministry is struggling to find land in prime areas, the minister of the interior said, adding housing in distant areas would struggle to attract residentsBy Lee Wen-hsin and Jake Chung / Staff reporter, with staff writerFewer social housing units are being built due to land scarcity, the Ministry of the Interior (MOI) said yesterday, adding that it is shifting focus to accelerating lease and management services. The government’s lease and management program aims to facilitate the rental of otherwise unused and empty properties to disadvantaged families, students and workers. The adoption of the lease and management program is 30 to 40 percent more effective in reducing carbon emissions than building social housing, it said. Due to slow construction of social housing, scarce land and slow acquisition, fewer social housing units would be built, Minister of the Interior Liu Shyh-fang (劉世芳) said yesterday. If social welfare housing is built outside prime areas, it would struggle to attract residents, she added.
Source:Taipei Times
January 10, 2026 17:15 UTC
Taiwan ranks 23rd in AI useBy Chiu Chiao-chun / Staff writerA recent Microsoft survey ranked Taiwan 23rd in the world in artificial intelligence (AI) use, with 28.4 percent of Taiwanese reporting that they use the technology. In Taiwan, AI use last year increased to 28.4 percent, from 26.4 percent, overtaking the US (28.3 percent) by a small margin. Logos of artificial intelligence apps including ChatGPT, center, are displayed on a phone screen in Vaasa, Finland, on June 6, 2023. The poll identified a divide between developed and developing economies, with AI usage rates of 24.7 percent and 14.1 percent respectively. The United Arab Emirates had an AI usage rate of 54 percent, the highest in the world, the institute said.
Source:Taipei Times
January 10, 2026 17:15 UTC