Fri, Nov 29, 2002 - Page 3 News List

Taiwan quick take

STAFF WRITER, WITH AGENCIES

Health

Alcohol ban for Aborigines

In order to battle the counterfeit rice wine problem, the Council of Indigenous Peoples yesterday morning announced to a ban on Aborigines drinking on the streets or in stores in the daytime, Chinese-language media reported yesterday. The council has informed offices of Aboriginal townships and villages about the new regulation. It has also demanded that all township and village chiefs set good examples by no longer using rice wine as a liquor. Almost 30 people nationwide have been poisoned by bootleg rice wines over the past week, many of them Aborigines.

Transportation

Lin backs higher speed limit

The Ministry of Transportation and Communications is considering raising the speed limit on some sections of the Sun Yat-sen Freeway from 100kph to 120kph. At a meeting on traffic safety yesterday, Minister of Transportation and Communications Lin Ling-san (林陵三) said many sections of the freeway have been expanded to three lanes and can handle the higher speeds. The speed limits, which had been 70kph, 90kph and 100kph, depending on the section of freeway, were raised to 100kph in all sections last December.

Labor dispute

Vietnamese workers beaten

Hundreds of Vietnamese workers clashed with Taiwanese bosses at a furniture factory in the southern province of Binh Duong, officials said yesterday. Police were mobilized to break up the violence, which flared when 30 bosses attacked workers who tried to join striking colleagues outside the factory, union official Nguyen Van Khuong said. Chen Chung Hoan, general director of Doanh Duc factory, made an official apology on Wednesday for the behavior of his officials and pledged to deal firmly with wrongdoers.

Elections

TSU supports clean vote

The TSU yesterday threw its support behind a "clean election promotion campaign." TSU Chairman Huang Chu-wen (黃主文) expressed his party's support for the campaign launched by a non-government organization headed by Chai Sung-lin (柴松林), a noted sociologist and promoter of clean politics. Huang said vote-buying and violence eroded Taiwan's young democracy. "Therefore, all political parties and individual politicians should support the clean election campaign," he noted. All seven of the TSU's candidates for the Taipei city council elections also signed up to support the campaign.

Haiti

Taiwan-funded road opens

A highway linking the Haitian capital's international airport to the city's downtown district has been completed with funds donated by Taiwan. Taiwan's government has donated more than US$8 million for construction of the 7.26km highway linking Port-au-Prince's downtown to its international airport, which is Haiti's main gateway. The first two sections of the highway were built by a Haitian contractor and the remaining five sections were all constructed by Overseas Construction Co, which is partly owned by Taiwan business groups. Overseas Construction hosted a party on Wednesday to mark the completion of the project. More than 200 people attended the ceremony.

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