The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has proposed plans to advance its “Africa Project,” aiming to expand Taiwan’s diplomatic relations with countries on the continent.
During her trip to Eswatini in September last year, President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) instructed the government to further advance the Africa Project, as she learned that many African countries were interested and supported the initiative.
The ministry has laid out five goals to move the project forward in a report submitted to the Legislative Yuan.
Photo: CNA
It proposed assisting Taiwanese businesspeople based in Africa to boost local markets and continue to explore the possibility of doing business in major countries in the region.
The plan is also aims to cultivate talent through government scholarships so that more students from African countries to study in Taiwan.
To promote specializing in African affairs, the ministry would encourage higher education institutions in Taiwan and African countries to establish sister-school ties as well as advocate for Taiwanese to study, conduct research or join internship programs in Africa.
Taiwan should also expand cooperation with African countries on women’s empowerment, climate change, food security and youth exchanges, the report says.
Fostering female entrepreneurs would help alleviate youth unemployment issues in some African countries, while collaborating on climate change and food security issues would create business opportunities for Taiwan’s renewable energy and agricultural biotechnology industries, it says.
Taiwanese businesses in Africa are encouraged to hire young local people to ease labor shortages and English teachers from Eswatini could be encouraged to teach in Taiwan, it says.
The ministry also proposed working with the Ministry of Economic Affairs and the Overseas Community Affairs Council to collect opinions from Taiwanese living or working in Africa to prepare informed action plans to deepen relations and economic exchanges between Taiwan and African countries.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it would continue seeking input from agencies to finalize its plan, which the legislature is to deliberate and vote on.
Launched in 2019, the Africa Project has facilitated the establishment of the Republic of Somaliland Representative Office in Taiwan and the Taiwan Representative Office in the Republic of Somaliland in 2020, and the reopening of the Taipei Representative Office in the Ivory Coast in 2022.
Taiwan also has an embassy in Eswatini and three other missions in Africa: the Taipei Trade Office in the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Taipei Liaison Office in the Republic of South Africa and the Taipei Liaison Office in Cape Town.
UNITED: The premier said Trump’s tariff comments provided a great opportunity for the private and public sectors to come together to maintain the nation’s chip advantage The government is considering ways to assist the nation’s semiconductor industry or hosting collaborative projects with the private sector after US President Donald Trump threatened to impose a 100 percent tariff on chips exported to the US, Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) said yesterday. Trump on Monday told Republican members of the US Congress about plans to impose sweeping tariffs on semiconductors, steel, aluminum, copper and pharmaceuticals “in the very near future.” “It’s time for the United States to return to the system that made us richer and more powerful than ever before,” Trump said at the Republican Issues Conference in Miami, Florida. “They
GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY: Taiwan must capitalize on the shock waves DeepSeek has sent through US markets to show it is a tech partner of Washington, a researcher said China’s reported breakthrough in artificial intelligence (AI) would prompt the US to seek a stronger alliance with Taiwan and Japan to secure its technological superiority, a Taiwanese researcher said yesterday. The launch of low-cost AI model DeepSeek (深度求索) on Monday sent US tech stocks tumbling, with chipmaker Nvidia Corp losing 16 percent of its value and the NASDAQ falling 612.46 points, or 3.07 percent, to close at 19,341.84 points. On the same day, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Sector index dropped 488.7 points, or 9.15 percent, to close at 4,853.24 points. The launch of the Chinese chatbot proves that a competitor can
TAIWAN DEFENSE: The initiative would involve integrating various systems in a fast-paced manner through the use of common software to obstruct a Chinese invasion The first tranche of the US Navy’s “Replicator” initiative aimed at obstructing a Chinese invasion of Taiwan would be ready by August, a US Naval Institute (USNI) News report on Tuesday said. The initiative is part of a larger defense strategy for Taiwan, and would involve launching thousands of uncrewed submarines, surface vessels and aerial vehicles around Taiwan to buy the nation and its partners time to assemble a response. The plan was first made public by the Washington Post in June last year, when it cited comments by US Indo-Pacific Commander Admiral Samuel Paparo on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue
MARITIME SECURITY: Of the 52 vessels, 15 were rated a ‘threat’ for various reasons, including the amount of time they spent loitering near subsea cables, the CGA said Taiwan has identified 52 “suspicious” Chinese-owned ships flying flags of convenience that require close monitoring if detected near the nation, the Coast Guard Administration (CGA) said yesterday, as the nation seeks to protect its subsea telecoms cables. The stricter regime comes after a Cameroon-flagged vessel was briefly detained by the CGA earlier this month on suspicion of damaging an international cable northeast of Taiwan. The vessel is owned by a Hong Kong-registered company with a Chinese address given for its only listed director, the CGA said previously. Taiwan fears China could sever its communication links as part of an attempt