CRIME
Northern schools reopen
School campuses in northern Taiwan reopened to the public during non-school hours yesterday, following the capture late on Wednesday of an escaped fugitive in New Taipei City. Taipei, New Taipei City, Keelung and Yilan County all announced the reopenings on Wednesday evening, after saying earlier in the day that the campuses would remain closed to the public for an indefinite period. The escaped fugitive, identified as Chien Yu-hung (簡郁紘), fled from a secure facility at a Keelung hospital on Sunday, where he was receiving court-ordered treatment for mental illness, police said. The 39-year-old was found guilty in August last year of attempted murder after assaulting a pedestrian with a glass bottle seven months earlier. Following Chien’s diagnosis of schizophrenia, the Taipei District Court sentenced him to five years of medical guardianship to be followed by a three-year prison sentence. On Monday, Chien was found to have taken the Taipei MRT from Longshan Temple Station to Xinpu Station, at which point the authorities stepped up the search in New Taipei City. The New Taipei City Police Department on Wednesday said that it arrested Chien at an apartment building in Sinjhuang District (新莊).
DIPLOMACY
MOFA, Austria begin talks
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday said that it has been engaging in talks with the Austrian government after it was recently informed that Taiwan-issued international driver’s permits (IDP) would no longer be accepted in the EU country. Before the issue is resolved, the government has temporarily suspended accepting Austria-issued IDPs in Taiwan, MOFA deputy spokesman Hsiao Kuang-wei (蕭光偉) said. The ministry confirmed a day earlier that it had been notified by the Austrian government of its decision to no longer accept Taiwan-issued IDPs. The Austrian Office in Taipei yesterday said that it had not been made aware of the Austrian government’s decision ahead of time, adding that it has since been relaying Taiwan’s reaction to Vienna, including the decision to suspend the acceptance of Austrian-issued IDPs. The office is still waiting for its government’s official response.
TRADE
Taiwan, UK sign MOU
Taiwan and the UK on Wednesday signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on organic agriculture cooperation, allowing the export of related products between both sides. Attending the signing ceremony at the British Office Taipei, Deputy Minister of Agriculture Minister Hu Jong-i (胡忠一) said the MOU between his ministry and the British Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs was groundbreaking for Taiwan’s agriculture sector. Under the MOU, the two sides are to recognize each other’s organic food and processed products, a prerequisite for Taiwan to allow such imports as regulated by the Organic Agriculture Promotion Act (有機農業促進法). Prior to Wednesday’s MOU, Taiwan had only signed similar treaties with Japan, Australia, New Zealand, the US, Canada, India and Paraguay, Hu said. The UK has 480,000 hectares of organic farmland and has been eager to export its products to Taiwan since Brexit, he said, adding that among the products from the UK are coffee, beverages and processed food products. The European market in general is interested in Taiwan’s organic tea, rice flour, cookies made from mixed grains, processed fruit juice, organic rice and gluten-free grains, he said.
SEND A MESSAGE: Sinking the amphibious assault ship, the lead warship of its class, is meant to show China the US Navy is capable of sinking their ships, an analyst said The US and allied navies plan to sink a 40,000-tonne ship at the latest Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise to simulate defeating a Chinese amphibious assault on Taiwan. This year’s RIMPAC — the 29th iteration of the world’s largest naval exercise — involves the US, 28 partners, more than 25,000 personnel, 40 warships, three submarines and more than 150 aircraft operating in and around Hawaii from yesterday to Aug. 1, the US Navy said in a press release. The major components of the event include multidomain warfare exercises in multiship surface engagements, anti-submarine warfare and multi-axis defense of a carrier strike
Taiwanese could risk being extradited to China when traveling in countries with close ties to Beijing, Taiwan Association of University Professors deputy chairman Chen Li-fu (陳俐甫) said on Friday. Chen’s comments came after China on Friday last week announced new judicial guidelines targeting Taiwanese independence advocates. Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos and Djibouti are among the countries where Taiwanese could risk being extradited to China, he said. The Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) on Thursday elevated the travel alert for China, Hong Kong and Macau to “orange” after Beijing announced its guidelines to “severely punish Taiwanese independence diehards for splitting the country and inciting secession.” Extradition treaties
The airspace around Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport and Taipei International Airport (Songshan airport) is to be closed for an hour on July 25 and July 23 respectively, due to the Han Kuang military exercises, the Ministry of National Defense said yesterday. The annual exercise is to be held on Taiwan proper and its outlying islands from July 22 to 26. During last year’s exercise, the military conducted anti-aircraft landing drills at the Taoyuan airport for the first time, for which a one-hour no-fly ban was issued. Based on a live-fire bulletin sent out by the Maritime and Port Bureau, the nation’s
Taiwan and Thailand have signed an agreement to promote and protect bilateral investment and trade, the Executive Yuan’s Office of Trade Negotiations (OTN) said on Friday. The agreement on “Promotion and Protection of Investments” was signed by Representative to Thailand Chang Chun-fu (張俊福) and Thailand Trade and Economic Office in Taipei executive director Narong Boonsatheanwong on Thursday, the OTN said in a news release. Thailand has become the fifth trading partner to sign an investment agreement with Taiwan since 2016, following earlier agreements with the Philippines, India, Vietnam and Canada, the OTN said. The deal marks a significant milestone in the development of