Wed, Dec 11, 2002 - Page 3 News List

Taiwan quick take

Diplomacy

Hondurans begin visit

Honduras National Congress President Porfirio Lobo Sosa, at the head of a nine-member delegation, arrived in Taipei yesterday for a four-day visit. During the visit, Lobo and his delegation will call on President Chen Shui-bian, Legislative Yuan President Wang Jin-pyng (王金平) and other government officials. They will also visit the Taiwan Handicraft Promotion Center, the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall and the Taipei World Trade Center before departing Friday.

Politics

KMT suspends Liu San-chi

The KMT Party Discipline Committee decided yesterday to suspend the party rights of Liu San-chi (劉三琦), the new director-general of the Directorate General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics. A KMT official said that Liu had explained his decision to accept the appointment to KMT Secretary-General Lin Fong-cheng (林豐正) at the end of last month and had obtained the party's understanding. Liu, formerly a deputy director-general of the bureau, was promoted by Premier Yu Shyi-kun to fill the Cabinet post after then-director-general Lin Chun (林全) was appointed to head the finance ministry. Two other KMT members in the Cabinet who have had their party rights suspended are Minister of National Defense Tang Yao-ming (湯曜明) and Veterans Affairs Administration Chairman Yang Te-chih (楊德智).

Travel

MOFA lifts Bali ban

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday eased its temporary ban on travel to Bali which was imposed after the October bomb blast that killed 185 people and injured around 300 others. But ministry officials still urged all those going to Indonesia and other Southeast Asian countries during the Christmas, New Year and Lunar New Year holidays to be on alert for their own safety. The latest travel guideline to Bali will be effective until February 28, next year, they said. The officials stressed that people traveling to Southeast Asia should keep close contact with Taiwan's missions in those countries, adding information could be accessed on the Web at www.mofa.gov.tw. The officials said that Taiwan travel agents traveled to Bali on Nov. 4 to inspect safety measures first hand. They found that the Indonesian government has sent additional military men and policemen to Bali to safeguard such public places as its airport, hotels, shopping malls and tourist spots.

Human Rights

Poll shows progress

Taiwan has made moderate progress in human rights protection over the past year, according to the results of a survey released by the Chinese Association for Human Rights yesterday. The non-profit association conducted a survey of the nation's human rights situation annually to mark yesterday's World Human Rights Day. The association surveyed the opinions of 111 finance and economic scholars, 23 legislators, 21 welfare service administrators and 10 social group executives about the nation's human rights conditions in five categories -- education and culture, women's rights, economic rights, judicial rights and environmental rights. Survey results showed that the government made slight progress on protection of all these rights as compared with last year's levels, but that the scores remained low. Only educational and cultural rights managed to receive a passing score of 3.03 points.

Agencies

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