The Taipei City Government yesterday urged Taipei Dome contractor Farglory Group (遠雄集團) to renegotiate its contract, with Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je (柯文哲) saying that legal and safety issues have always been the city’s focus in the handling of the dome’s construction.
The Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office on Tuesday said that it is seeking a 24-year jail sentence for Farglory Group founder Chao Teng-hsiung (趙藤雄) for alleged bribery and breach of trust in cases involving several public construction projects, which prompted Taipei Deputy Mayor Chen Chin-jun (陳景峻) to call a news conference to discuss the dome project outside his office yesterday.
Chen, who represented the city government in negotiating with Farglory, said: “I am cleaning up the mess of the previous administration led by [then-Taipei mayor] Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九).”
Photo: Huang Yao-cheng, Taipei Times
Chen said he has not communicated with the company since Chao’s indictment, but in a previous meeting he asked the company to send documents required for the resumption of construction to the city government for review, adding that the company had submitted them before a city council question-and-answer session began.
“A new problem involving the project has emerged, which is that of the city government’s alleged loss of billions of New Taiwan dollars in income from royalties [which the previous administration agreed the company did not have to pay], and would involve renegotiating the contract,” Chen said.
“We urge Farglory to come and renegotiate with us as soon as possible, because stalling is not a solution to the problem,” he said, adding that whether the contract can be renegotiated or whether the company wants to continue the project would need further discussion after the two sides meet.
Ko said the city government under his direction has always followed the principles of fair and transparent dealings over the Taipei Dome, and did not try to deny or gave in to the difficulties left by the previous administration, despite the negative effects it has had on his public support.
“The city government’s priority is that the Dome must be safe,” he said, adding that the city government halted the construction project on May 20, 2015, because the company did not operate according to construction plans.
Rulings by the appeal committee, the Control Yuan and the Executive Yuan all proved that the city government’s order to halt the construction for safety reasons was legal, he said.
Taipei Department of Legal Affairs Commissioner Yuan Hsiu-hui (袁秀慧) said the former commissioner had begun modifying the contract under Taipei Deputy Mayor Teng Chia-chi’s (鄧家基) instruction after Ko took office, but the modification process was later suspended because the project was halted.
As the project is now in the process of being reviewed for resumption of construction, the contract modification process would also be relaunched, she said, adding that the amount of royalties would need further calculation and negotiation.
Responding to media inquiries about whether Taiwan Architecture and Building Center (TABC) safety reviews of the dome might be flawed, Ko said the review committee members have changed, but he cannot speak for the center.
Former TABC chief executive officer Hsu Ming-wen (許銘文) was also charged on Tuesday.
Taipei Department of Urban Development Commissioner Lin Jou-min (林洲民) said the project has been reviewed by the center three times, in 2011, 2012 and this year, and all committee members but one have changed since 2011.
However, since Chao has been charged, the city government has sent a letter to the Ministry of the Interior to confirm the legality of the approval notices that the ministry issued in 2011 and 2012, Ko said.
Businesspeople should not be greedy Ko said, adding that if Farglory had balanced its finances maybe the Taipei Dome would be operating already.
No one working on the project, including Chao, had been charged over the construction of the dome, so the contract between the company and the city government is still legal, Farglory Group spokesman Jacky Yang (楊舜欽) said.
NO HUMAN ERROR: After the incident, the Coast Guard Administration said it would obtain uncrewed aerial vehicles and vessels to boost its detection capacity Authorities would improve border control to prevent unlawful entry into Taiwan’s waters and safeguard national security, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said yesterday after a Chinese man reached the nation’s coast on an inflatable boat, saying he “defected to freedom.” The man was found on a rubber boat when he was about to set foot on Taiwan at the estuary of Houkeng River (後坑溪) near Taiping Borough (太平) in New Taipei City’s Linkou District (林口), authorities said. The Coast Guard Administration’s (CGA) northern branch said it received a report at 6:30am yesterday morning from the New Taipei City Fire Department about a
IN BEIJING’S FAVOR: A China Coast Guard spokesperson said that the Chinese maritime police would continue to carry out law enforcement activities in waters it claims The Philippines withdrew its coast guard vessel from a South China Sea shoal that has recently been at the center of tensions with Beijing. BRP Teresa Magbanua “was compelled to return to port” from Sabina Shoal (Xianbin Shoal, 仙濱暗沙) due to bad weather, depleted supplies and the need to evacuate personnel requiring medical care, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) spokesman Jay Tarriela said yesterday in a post on X. The Philippine vessel “will be in tiptop shape to resume her mission” after it has been resupplied and repaired, Philippine Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin, who heads the nation’s maritime council, said
REGIONAL STABILITY: Taipei thanked the Biden administration for authorizing its 16th sale of military goods and services to uphold Taiwan’s defense and safety The US Department of State has approved the sale of US$228 million of military goods and services to Taiwan, the US Department of Defense said on Monday. The state department “made a determination approving a possible Foreign Military Sale” to the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the US for “return, repair and reshipment of spare parts and related equipment,” the defense department’s Defense Security Cooperation Agency said in a news release. Taiwan had requested the purchase of items and services which include the “return, repair and reshipment of classified and unclassified spare parts for aircraft and related equipment; US Government
More than 500 people on Saturday marched in New York in support of Taiwan’s entry to the UN, significantly more people than previous years. The march, coinciding with the ongoing 79th session of the UN General Assembly, comes close on the heels of growing international discourse regarding the meaning of UN Resolution 2758. Resolution 2758, adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1971, recognizes the People’s Republic of China (PRC) as the “only lawful representative of China.” It resulted in the Republic of China (ROC) losing its seat at the UN to the PRC. Taiwan has since been excluded from