KMT uses issues, swag to attract youthBy Shih Hsiao-kuang and Kayleigh Madjar / Staff reporter, with staff writerThe Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) is this year setting its sights on young, moderate voters by focusing on policy issues such as animal protection and housing, and offering trendy merchandise, the party’s youth director said on Saturday last week. To boost waning support for the KMT among young voters after last year’s general election, the party first focused on reaching out to people already within the pan-blue camp, KMT Youth Department director Chen Kuan-an (陳冠安) said. People hold Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) merchandise and books about Taiwanese history at a news conference in Taipei to launch an online shopping portal on Nov. 17 last year. Another task for the department is to design merchandise, Chen said. However, many young pan-blue supporters are not enthusiastic about working in politics due to the party’s opaque promotion system, he added.
Source:Taipei Times
February 27, 2021 15:56 UTC
“Starting on March 1, individuals under home isolation will also be subject to the ‘one person per housing unit’ rule,” he said. Photo: Chu Pei-hsiung, Taipei TimesPeople undergoing home isolation cannot stay in a housing unit in which non-isolated people live, unless they obtain special approval, the CECC said. However, she tested positive upon ending centralized quarantine on Thursday, he said. He tested positive in a paid test on Thursday after having completed quarantine at a hotel, he added. The other case is a Philippine migrant worker who tested positive in a paid test on Friday while practicing self-health management, Chen said.
Source:Taipei Times
February 27, 2021 15:56 UTC
People who owe parking fees for one week or longer should be denied parking public spaces, Ko said at a city government meeting on traffic affairs yesterday. The city in 2015 established a mechanism to enforce parking fee payment, and in 2018 added a mechanism to track and lock vehicles that have unpaid fees, the Taipei Parking Management Development Office said. The office last year collected NT$25 million (US$883,205) in fines from 210,000 vehicle owners who had not paid their parking fees, it said. Ko urged officials to target vehicles instead of owners, saying that vehicles should be denied parking in the city if there are outstanding fees. Vehicles whose owners have not paid their fees in more than a month should be towed immediately, Ko said.
Source:Taipei Times
February 26, 2021 15:56 UTC
Su Chen-ching bows out of DPPBy Jason Pan / Staff reporterDemocratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Su Chen-ching (蘇震清) yesterday announced that he was removing himself from the party until he clears his name in a bribery case. Su, 56, has represented Pingtung County constituencies for four terms as a legislator. Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Su Chen-ching is pictured at a news conference in Taipei yesterday at which he announced that he is leaving the party. Although the corruption case has been a setback, observers had said that Su might run as an independent candidate. A run by Su as an independent would likely split the DPP vote, political commentators had said.
Source:Taipei Times
February 26, 2021 15:56 UTC
I was eating a late dinner after spending all afternoon at the library researching and writing about some of the more obscure victims of the 228 Incident, the infamous anti-Chinese Nationalist Party uprising in 1947 that was brutally suppressed. They proceeded to look it up online and appeared astonished at the new information, especially over the number of alleged victims. The entrance to the special exhibition, Scars on the Land at the National 228 Memorial Museum. An overall view of the special exhibition Scars of the Land at the National 228 Memorial Museum. Scars of the Land shows a before and after photo of the National 228 Memorial Museum, which used to be home to the Taiwan Provincial Assembly.
Source:Taipei Times
February 26, 2021 15:56 UTC
Quanta planning NT$910m expansion in ThailandBy Angelica Oung / Staff reporterQuanta Computer Inc (廣達電腦) is to invest NT$910 million (US$32.15 million) to expand capacity in Thailand through its subsidiary QMB Co, the company said in a regulatory filing yesterday. The investment is part of Quanta’s NT$2 billion Thai expansion plans, which it announced in a regulatory filing in November last year. Quanta Computer Inc chairman Barry Lam speaks at a meeting of the AI on Chip Taiwan Alliance in Taipei on Sept. 21 last year. Photo: Tu Chien-jung, Taipei TimesIn an investors’ conference call, Quanta chairman Barry Lam (林百里) described the move to Thailand as a “must.”According to the Taiwan Stock Exchange filing, Quanta entered into a contract with Cheer You Construction Thailand (啟宇營造). In addition to investing in Thailand, Quanta has continued to expand its Taiwanese production capacity.
Source:Taipei Times
February 26, 2021 15:56 UTC
From Monday, China is to stop importing pineapples from Taiwan, the Chinese General Administration of Customs said. The regulation is a normal measure for ensuring biosafety, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office spokesman Ma Xiaoguang (馬曉光) said in a news release later yesterday. Photo: Liu Hsin-de, Taipei TimesSince last year, Chinese customs officials have repeatedly seized pineapples imported from Taiwan that carried “perilous organisms,” Ma said. In “normal” international trade practices, this qualification rate is top-notch, while the few pineapples that did not pass were approved after fumigation, Chen said. China accounted for 97 percent of exported pineapples, followed by Japan (2 percent) and Hong Kong (1 percent), the data showed.
Source:Taipei Times
February 26, 2021 15:56 UTC
Officials deny HK tycoon residency, citing securityBy Wang Kuang-jen and Chen Yu-fu / Staff reporters, with CNAProtecting national security is the priority, Premier Su Tseng-chang (蘇貞昌) said yesterday after the government rejected residency applications by Hong Kong entertainment tycoon Charles Heung (向華強) and his son. “Government officials handling the case have applied the most rigorous scrutiny, with the top priority to protect national security,” Su said. Hong Kong entertainment tycoon Charles Heung, center, and his wife, Tiffany Chan, left, attend an exhibition in Kaohsiung on July 12, 2019. Sources said that the decision was made after meetings between officials from the NIA, the National Security Bureau and the Mainland Affairs Council. Bureau officials said that the foundation conducts propaganda campaigns for Beijing and organizes programs for the Chinese government’s push for “all-citizen national defense” in public education.
Source:Taipei Times
February 26, 2021 15:56 UTC
Looking to Taiwan in chip shortageBy Thomas ShattuckAs the US marks one month under the leadership of President Joe Biden, the conversations around Taiwan have shifted. From last month to this month, the conversation about Taiwan has shifted again — from Taiwan being a “bargaining chip” to Taiwan bargaining its chips. TSMC is working on alleviating the chip shortage, but executives have said that they are already operating at full capacity. It is beyond the government’s power to interfere with private commercial contracts.”The auto chip shortage is being felt around the world. Between its COVID-19 response and world-class semiconductor industry, Taiwan has much to offer the world.
Source:Taipei Times
February 26, 2021 15:56 UTC
DRAM maker boosts capex to NT$15.6 billionBy Lisa Wang / Staff reporterDRAM chipmaker Nanya Technology Corp’s (南亞科技) board of directors yesterday approved a proposal to boost capital expenditure for this year to NT$15.6 billion (US$551.12 million), mainly to fund the initial production of next-generation 10-nanometer (nm) class technology. The capital spending exceeded its original estimate of NT$15 billion and represented a sharp increase from last year’s NT$8.5 billion. Photo: Lisa Wang, Taipei TimesThe company mainly relies on 20nm process technology at present. Nanya Technology’s board also approved a proposed cash dividend of NT$1.299 per common share, with total payment estimated to reach NT$4 billion. The cash dividend proposal is subject to shareholders’ approval at its annual general meeting on May 27.
Source:Taipei Times
February 26, 2021 15:56 UTC
COVAX doses are expected to be available by AprilStaff writer, with CNAA total of 4.76 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine that Taiwan has secured through the global COVAX sharing initiative are expected to be available by April, Premier Su Tseng-chang (蘇貞昌) said yesterday. The vaccines would be those made by British-Swedish pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca in collaboration with the University of Oxford, Su said. They would be among 20 million doses that the government has arranged so far — including 5.05 million doses from US pharmaceutical company Moderna Inc and 10 million additional doses from AstraZeneca — he said, adding that they are likely to become available next quarter. Photo: Fang Pin-chao, Taipei TimesIn addition, a deal with US pharmaceutical company Pfizer and BioNTech is approaching completion, which might provide an additional 5 million doses, a Cabinet report submitted to lawmakers showed. “The order of vaccinations has been planned, with front-line medical workers given priority for the jabs,” Su said.
Source:Taipei Times
February 26, 2021 15:56 UTC
Tsai speaks on Aboriginal inclusionBy Yang Chun-hui, Cheng Ming-hsiang and Jonathan Chin / Staff reporters, with staff writerPresident Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) yesterday said that academics are working to include Aboriginal perspectives into the discourse on the 228 Incident, now that discussion of the massacre is no longer taboo. Tsai made the remarks in a speech at a forum on the 228 Incident and Taiwanese Aborigines at the Academia Historica in Taipei. Academia Historica President Chen Yi-shen, right, presents President Tsai Ing-wen with a compilation of files on the 228 Incident at a forum at the academy in Taipei yesterday. Evidence of Aboriginal collaboration and resistance can be seen in historical records of the 228 Incident, he said. In other news, Vice President William Lai (賴清德) will not attend a 228 Incident event planned by the Taipei City Government, Taipei Deputy Mayor Tsai Ping-kun (蔡炳坤) confirmed on Wednesday.
Source:Taipei Times
February 25, 2021 15:56 UTC
Nutritionists warn parents over diet for obese childrenBy Chen Feng-li and Jonathan Chin / Staff reporter, with staff writerYumin Hospital in Nantou County’s Caotun Township (草屯) on Monday said that 80 percent of obese children consulted by the hospital’s nutritionists had abnormally high levels of uric acid, blood lipids or sugar, or high blood pressure. Two years of medical data from 288 obese children were analyzed, hospital nutritionists Chen I-en (陳苡恩) and Liao Mei-yu (廖美俞) said. Soy milk and yoghurt products are displayed at a news conference in Nantou County in an undated photograph. Unsweetened milk, soy milk and yogurt should be served instead of the sweetened alternative, Liao said. The consumption of vegetables, milk and fruit should be limited to three, two and two servings per day respectively, she said.
Source:Taipei Times
February 25, 2021 15:56 UTC
Rescue Datan’s Algal Reefs Alliance convener Pan Chong-cheng (潘忠政) last year initiated a referendum proposal to protect the reefs. Rescue Datan’s Algal Reefs Alliance convener Pan Chong-cheng holds a chart showing the number of signatures the alliance’s referendum proposal had obtained as of Wednesday. Traffic moves in outside the Taipei Railway Station yesterday, while the air quality is poor. The administration has cut 90 percent of the station’s original size and has done its best to avoid the reef area, Lo said. The next elections are not until next year and critics should not link everything a party does to preparation for them, he said.
Source:Taipei Times
February 25, 2021 15:56 UTC
Cross-strait ties at a stalemate: forumDEADLOCK: While a war between Taiwan and China is not inevitable, cross-strait relations are bad and continue to deteriorate, former KMT legislator Lin Yu-fang saidBy Sherry Hsiao / Staff reporterAs relations between Taiwan and China continue to deteriorate, there is no immediate solution to the cross-strait stalemate in sight, National Policy Foundation member Lin Yu-fang (林郁方) said yesterday. National Policy Foundation member Lin Yu-fang, left, listens to experts discuss deteriorating relations between Taiwan and China at a forum at the foundation in Taipei yesterday. “Cross-strait relations are now entering a winter and freezing over,” Lin said. It will be a long time before cross-strait relations “blossom,” he said. “The ship’s transit through the Taiwan Strait demonstrates the US’ commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific.
Source:Taipei Times
February 25, 2021 15:56 UTC