The unpolluted, turquoise ocean surrounding the Marshall Islands will be what Li Shr-jie (黎世傑), who joined the alternative diplomatic-service program two years ago, misses most when he is due to leave the Pacific island nation in the middle of March.
Li, a graduate from National Taiwan University's Department of Horticulture, chose to enroll the program, a substitute for compulsory military service, because he wanted to go to Latin American countries.
When Li was informed he would be dispatched to the Marshall Islands, one of Taiwan's five allies in the Pacific, his parents were worried he could not cope with life in such a remote country.
PHOTO: MELODY CHEN, TAIPEI TIMES
"When I first came here, I had fever several times. I felt particularly lonely and bored at night," said the 26-year-old serviceman.
The alternative diplomatic-service program had proved daunting to some who signed up for it.
"When the countries we were to be sent were announced, six of the 41 boys volunteering to join it withdrew," Li said.
The government's International Cooperation and Development Fund, which coordinates the program, usually deploys servicemen to Taiwan's 27 diplomatic allies to assist local workers.
Since Li arrived on the Marshall Islands in November 2002, he has been working with Taiwan's Technical Mission in the country.
Li's daily routine includes supervising workers in the field in the mission's compound, where a five-person agricultural team, including Li, grows various kinds of fruits and vegetables and raises pigs.
Li also helps with the mission's paperwork. In his leisure time, he often goes fishing, plays basketball and visits downtown Majuro, the Marshall Islands' capital.
"I also keep two dogs," he said.
Having picked up some simple words in the local tongue, Li said he would miss his friends in the Marshall Islands when his term finishes in March.
"They love to make friends," Li said of local residents.
The technical mission arrived in August 1999 after Taiwan established diplomatic ties with the Marshall Islands in November 1998.
The Marshall Islands government allotted about three hectares of land for the technical mission.
The mission has developed roughly one hectare to grow crops and build pigsties, according to the leader of the mission, Cheng Ming-ching (鄭明欽).
An agricultural expert from Hualien, Cheng had never joined a foreign mission before going to the Marshall Islands.
"Though the soil and climate in this country are different from that of Taiwan, I don't find it difficult to get used to life here," said Cheng, whose family has moved with him to the Marshall Islands.
People in the Marshall Islands had virtually no agricultural development before the arrival of Taiwan's technical mission.
"This country has very few natural resources and government budgets for agriculture are limited," Cheng said.
Through the mission's help, 50 households in the country have turned to farming and found the results satisfying, according to Cheng.
"Local farmers find their lives improved. They get the money to furnish their houses and are able to purchase refrigerators and television sets," Cheng said.
The mission developed agriculture on the Marshall Islands from nothing, Cheng said.
The situation of starting from scratch is now faced by Michael Lu (呂瑞源), leader of Taiwan's Technical Mission to Kiribati, Taiwan's newest ally.
Lu, who followed Minister of Foreign Affairs Eugene Chien's (簡又新) delegation to Kiribati earlier this month, will be starting agricultural work in a compound that used be home to a satellite station of China's.
Many cooperation programs between Kiribati and Taiwan have begun, Samuel Chen (陳世良), Taiwan's ambassador to Kiribati, said during Chien's visit there.
A local media agency, the Broadcasting and Publications Authority, which ran a story on the opening of Taiwan's embassy in Kiribati, is seeking assistance to improve its printing technology.
The agency consists of a publication manager, an editor, an assistant editor, two reporters, two printers and one typist.
The main function of the agency is to "produce a weekly bilingual newspaper aiming at informing local readers about a variety of events and issues that occur within the community, the government, the Pacific region and the world," said Tibewere Bobo, the publication manager.
The agency produces a weekly called Te Uekera meaning "The Tree of Knowledge."
Taiwan is to receive the first batch of Lockheed Martin F-16 Block 70 jets from the US late this month, a defense official said yesterday, after a year-long delay due to a logjam in US arms deliveries. Completing the NT$247.2 billion (US$7.69 billion) arms deal for 66 jets would make Taiwan the third nation in the world to receive factory-fresh advanced fighter jets of the same make and model, following Bahrain and Slovakia, the official said on condition of anonymity. F-16 Block 70/72 are newly manufactured F-16 jets built by Lockheed Martin to the standards of the F-16V upgrade package. Republic of China
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