India infrastructure drive counters ChinaAFP, ZEMITHANG, IndiaFreshly laid roads, bridges, upgraded military camps and new civilian infrastructure dot the winding high Himalayan route to the Indian frontier village of Zemithang — which China last month renamed to press its claim to the area. Indian army soldiers display arms at a camp near Pankang Teng Tso Lake in the Tawang District of India’s Arunachal Pradesh state on April 3. Photo: AFPCulturally largely Tibetan, Arunachal Pradesh is savage territory for battle, with mountain passes as high as 4,750m still covered in snowdrifts as late as May, and thickly forested slopes lower down. The Indian army officer charged with preventing a repetition is Brigadier N.M. Bendigeri, who commands thousands of troops in Tawang. “India wants peace with everyone,” Shah said at Kibithoo, one of the first Arunachal Pradesh villages overrun in 1962.
Source:Taipei Times
May 05, 2023 03:43 UTC
Xi’s ‘pro-Russia’ envoy to EurasiaBy Sheng Yi-che 冼義哲The long-awaited telephone call between Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy finally took place on Wednesday last week. Li was until 2019 the Chinese ambassador to Moscow, and has decades of experience serving in the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Soviet Union before its collapse. In 2019, Russian President Vladimir Putin presented Li with the Order of Friendship at a ceremony in the Kremlin — that is enough to betray Li’s pro-Russia stance and ideology. What is Xi playing at, tasking a blatantly pro-Russia “wolf warrior” diplomat to bring Moscow and Kyiv to the negotiating table? Li’s visit as an ambassador serves no real purpose, as he is merely doing Xi’s bidding to buy Moscow time.
Source:Taipei Times
May 05, 2023 03:43 UTC
India’s exports likely to reach US$900bn this yearReuters, NEW DELHIIndia’s exports of goods and services could reach US$900 billion in the current financial year, up from US$770 billion the previous year, remaining resilient despite global headwinds, Federation of Indian Export Organisations director general Ajay Sahai said. India’s exports have increased by more than US$200 billion in the past two years, led by a surge in software, mobile technology, agricultural and petroleum exports. Exports of agricultural, petroleum and electronic goods remained strong in Western markets due to pricing factors, while exports to Asian and Middle East countries have grown substantially, exporters said. “Indian exporters are hopeful that both countries would soon work out a mechanism allowing payments in local currencies that would facilitate the shipments of Indian goods to Russia,” Sahai said. However, Indian officials have said Russia was reluctant to accept payments in rupees for its oil exports.
Source:Taipei Times
May 04, 2023 18:38 UTC
India’s overall birthrate has fallen in tandem with its rising economy, but poverty and a deep-rooted bias for male heirs have kept Bihar an engine room of national population growth. Gita Devi poses with her five children at her village house in Darbhanga District, Bihar, India. Village women Kavita Devi, left, and Savita Devi pose with their children at their house in Darbhanga District, Bihar, India. Pregnant women and mothers stand in a queue as they wait for their turn to see an Auxiliary Nurse Midwife health worker at a state-run rural health centre in a village in the Darbhanga district of India’s Bihar state. “Our people say that a woman is useless if she can’t produce kids after marriage,” she said.
Source:Taipei Times
May 04, 2023 16:38 UTC
Education sector is too top-heavyBy Dino Wei 魏世昌The number of senior high-school students fell from 350,000 in 2012 to 290,000 in 2021, while the number of vocational high-school students fell from 460,000 to 260,000, Ministry of Education data showed. The percentage of high-school students attending vocational high schools fell from 56.99 percent to 47.3 percent, so that they were outnumbered by high-school students. Alliance Cultural Foundation International chairman Stanley Yen (嚴長壽) said that the structure of Taiwan’s education system has become imbalanced. A normal workforce structure should be a pyramid, with basic and middle-grade technical workers making up the majority. However, Taiwan’s education sector has created a top-heavy inverted pyramid by supplying fewer basic and middle-grade technical workers, but plenty of upper-management talent.
Source:Taipei Times
May 04, 2023 03:39 UTC
Manufacturing business monitor signals a downturnBy Crystal Hsu / Staff reporterThe business climate monitor for the manufacturing industry turned “blue” in March, from a revised “yellow-blue” in February, as demand, selling prices and operating conditions weakened, the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research (TIER, 台灣經濟研究院) said yesterday. The business composite index compiled by the Taipei-based think tank shed 0.56 points to 10.41, reflecting listless manufacturing activity, as global clients continued to adjust inventory amid poor sales. TIER uses a five-color spectrum to capture the industry’s movements, with “red” indicating a boom, “green” suggesting steady growth and “blue” signifying a downturn. Plastic and rubber product makers saw business shrinking by a similar amount, despite the peak season starting, the institute said. Vehicle sales picked up after chip shortages came to an end, enabling local suppliers of auto parts to report steady business growth, it said.
Source:Taipei Times
May 03, 2023 16:40 UTC
US special forces simulate defense of Taiwan in firstBy Yang Fu-yi and William Hetherington / Staff reporter, with staff writerThe US Army Special Operations Command (USASOC) for the first time simulated the defense of Taiwan against an invasion by China, the Military.com Web site reported on Sunday. The report, titled “Defending a Mock Invasion of Taiwan Signals Shift for Army Special Operations After Years of Counterinsurgency,” said that during its annual combat exercise last week, the USASOC landed Chinook helicopters on a concrete structure representing Taiwan, at the Range 68 training site in Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Members of the US’ 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment take part in an exercise in an undated photograph. During the exercise, soldiers also demonstrated intermediate to advanced command of Mandarin or Russian, the report said. The exercise included the firing of Carl Gustaf recoilless rifles, sabotaging of tunnels and use of AeroVironment Switchblade drones.
Source:Taipei Times
May 02, 2023 17:51 UTC
Prosecutors deny politics involved in ex-lawmaker’s caseBy Jason Pan / Staff reporterProsecutors yesterday rejected accusations of political persecution by former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) legislator Yen Kuan-heng (顏寬恒) following his indictment. The matter is now in the hands of the court,” Taichung District Prosecutors’ Office Deputy Chief Prosecutor Chan Chang-hui (詹常輝) said. Former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) legislator Yen Kuan-heng speaks to reporters in Taichung yesterday. They have been accused of fabricating documents and receipts to pocket the wages of an office assistant when Yen served as KMT legislator from 2016 to 2020. Yen told the news conference in Taichung that he was facing “trumped-up charges” and was targeted by the prosecutors for political persecution.
Source:Taipei Times
May 02, 2023 03:38 UTC
Tech, AI driving job changes for nearly 1/4 of all workersLABOR SHIFT: About 75 percent of firms said they expect to adopt new tech that would cut up to 26 million record-keeping and administrative jobsBloombergGlobal labor markets are poised for a new era of turbulence as technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) accelerate the decline of clerical work, while simultaneously increasing demand for technology and cybersecurity specialists. About 69 million jobs would be created and 83 million eliminated by 2027, resulting in a net decrease of 2 percent of current employment, the Future of Jobs report said. Photo: BloombergThe survey is based on input from about 800 companies employing more than 11 million workers across 45 economies and uses a dataset of 673 million jobs. About 75 percent of surveyed companies said they expect to adopt AI technologies over the next five years, which they predict would eliminate up to 26 million jobs in record-keeping and administrative positions — such as cashiers, ticket clerks, data entry and accounting. For now, AI remains a smaller threat to labor prospects than other macroeconomic factors such as slower economic growth, supply shortages and inflation, the report said.
Source:Taipei Times
May 02, 2023 02:02 UTC
From left, Taiwan People’s Party Taipei City Councilor Chang Chih-hao, and lawmakers Jang Chyi-lu and Lai Hsiang-ling attend a news conference at the Legislative Yuan in Taipei yesterday. Photo: Lo Pei-de, Taipei TimesTPP caucus director-general Jang Chyi-lu (張其祿) told a news conference in Taipei yesterday that national fire regulations are insufficient to keep people safe. The TPP caucus supports amending the act through public-private collaboration to bolster fire prevention management, improve safety standards, encourage public reporting and increase penalties, he said. Meanwhile, a separate firefighting equipment bill has languished in procedural process for 24 years, TPP caucus deputy convener Lai Hsiang-ling (賴香伶) said. A stalemate has formed on their intended roles, and the two main parties have yet to reach a consensus, she added.
Source:Taipei Times
May 01, 2023 17:28 UTC
Bolton lauds expanding US-Taiwan relationsBy Liu Tzu-hsuan / Staff reporterTaiwan’s friendly relationship with members of the US Congress provides a good foundation for expanding cooperation between the two sides, former US national security adviser John Bolton said yesterday. President Tsai Ing-wen, rights, meets former US national security adviser John Bolton at the Presidential Office in Taipei yesterday. Taiwan’s active diplomatic engagement in the US and friendly relations with US lawmakers have opened up more opportunities for cooperation, he said. Tsai thanked Bolton for showing his support for Taiwan through the visit and for his long-term contributions to deepening Taiwan-US ties. While serving as the White House national security adviser, Bolton supported US arms sales to Taiwan and Taiwan’s international participation, he said.
Source:Taipei Times
May 01, 2023 17:28 UTC
EDITORIAL: China is losing its economic lusterPublicly listed firms repatriated NT$114.4 billion (US$3.72 billion) of investment gains from China last year, a 175.7 percent surge from NT$41.5 billion in 2021 and the most since 2013, data released last month by the Financial Supervisory Commission showed. Previously, listed firms rarely repatriated their investment gains from China, as Beijing imposes strict foreign-exchange controls to curb capital outflows. Taiwanese firms also tend to keep most of their profits in China for further investments. There are three main reasons for Taiwanese listed firms to repatriate their investment gains. Third, China’s economic outlook has become more worrying for Taiwanese businesses, and nervousness over geopolitics has limited their investments there.
Source:Taipei Times
April 30, 2023 21:39 UTC
Occupied Ukrainian city under fire after Russia kills 26AFP, UMAN, UkraineRussian occupational authorities in southern Ukraine yesterday said that Ukrainian forces were subjecting the city of Novaya Kakhovka to “intense artillery fire” that had cut off electricity. Rescuers and residents search for survivors in the rubble next to a residential building that was hit by a missile in Uman, Ukraine, on Friday. Novaya Kakhovka fell to Russian forces on the first day of their offensive in Ukraine on Feb. 24 last year. On Friday, Russian strikes battered cities across Ukraine, killing 26 people, including five children. The barrage of almost two dozen missiles ended a weeks-long pause following the repeated Russian strikes that had aimed to paralyze Ukraine’s energy grid during the winter months.
Source:Taipei Times
April 30, 2023 00:30 UTC
The two policies are examples of how the ministry is trying to better meet the needs of families in need of care services. The Long-term Care Plan 2.0 was launched in 2017 to create an affordable and accessible long-term care system, and ensure that elderly and disabled people receive better care. It includes subsidies for in-home or facility care services, shuttle bus services, assistive devices, transforming people’s homes into a barrier-free environment and respite care services. Government data showed that only 5 percent of eligible families booked respite care services last year. It should also enhance cross-ministerial efforts to integrate services offered by migrant workers into Taiwan’s long-term care architecture.
Source:Taipei Times
April 29, 2023 21:40 UTC
Ma’s title changed by forum again by ‘malicious forces’Staff Writer, with CNAA Greek forum was allegedly urged by outside forces to repeatedly downplay the designation of former president Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) on its Web site, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said yesterday. The Delphi Economic Forum, which began on Wednesday in the Greek city of Delphi and ends today, was pressured by “malicious” forces to change Ma’s title in its online materials several times over the past few days, the ministry said. The Delphi forum on Friday last week changed Ma’s title from “former president of Taipei” to “former president of Taiwan” following calls from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ma’s office about the error. Ma’s title was later revised to “Former Leader of Taipei” until it was changed again to its current wording. Ma had participated in the forum’s opening ceremony and in closed-door dinners over the past two days, and his allocated seats were labeled “President Ma,” the statement said.
Source:Taipei Times
April 29, 2023 10:05 UTC