■POLITICS
Lai allegations dismissed
People First Party (PFP) Chairman James Soong (宋楚瑜) yesterday dismissed allegations that Mainland Affairs Council chairwoman-designate Lai Shin-yuan (賴幸媛) had asked to join his administration if he had won the presidential election in 2000. Soong also denied having any knowledge about Lai’s alleged bid for a legislator-at-large nomination from the PFP. “The speculations about Lai seeking positions from me are groundless and untrue. I hope that the public will stop speculating about the Cabinet lineup,” Soong said in a written statement. Soong made the comments in response to Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Chiu Yi’s (邱毅) accusations that Lai, a Taiwan Solidarity Union member, had asked to join Soong’s campaign team during the 2000 presidential election via a business tycoon’s wife.
■DIPLOMACY
Philippines protests visit
The head of the Philippine Senate’s foreign relations committee called yesterday for a diplomatic protest over reported plans by Taiwanese officials to visit the disputed Spratly Islands next week. Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, in a letter to Foreign Secretary Alberto Romulo, said the planned visit to the new airstrip on Taiping Island “would constitute a provocative act on the part of Taiwan” and violate a declaration by China and ASEAN’s Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea. Taiwan is not a signatory to the 2002 declaration, but Santiago said “it is bound by the declaration, which in my humble view has since evolved into regional customary international law.” Minister of National Defense Michael Tsai (蔡明憲) and a group of legislators are planning to visit the island on Wednesday.
■DIPLOMACY
Tokyo governor plans visit
Governor of Tokyo Shintaro Ishihara will visit Taiwan on May 19 to attend president-elect Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) inauguration the following day, the Sankei Shimbun reported yesterday. Ishihara will depart from Narita International Airport for Taipei, the report said. Outgoing President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) is scheduled to confer the Order of the Brilliant Star with Special Grand Gordon on Ishihara in recognition of his long-term efforts in promoting Taiwan-Japan ties, the report said. Ishihara is also expected to meet former president Lee Teng-hui (李登輝) and several economists in Taipei and to tour a high-tech park in Taichung.
■CRIME
Temple burglars arrested
Police yesterday arrested five members of a gang suspected of carrying out a string of temple burglaries over the past several years around the nation. In separate raids, police in Yangmei Township (楊梅), Taoyuan County, Chiayi, Taichung and Taoyuan City arrested the five members, including the suspected ringleaders, surnamed Yao and Hsu. The police also seized several items as evidence, including maps and information on the temples that were burgled, lock cutters, telescopes, walkie-talkies, fake guns and computer files with details of further planned burglaries. The members of the ring are suspected of having carried out more than 100 burglaries in which they grabbed over NT$10 million (US$329,000) in cash and valuable temple items, police said. Initial investigations revealed the ring members had also collected information on another 1,000 temples across the country.
■SPORTS
Champion kids run set
Three teams of children and parents will be selected next month to represent the country at the Olympic “Champion Kids” run in Beijing in August, sources from the Chinese Taipei Olympic Committee (CTOC) said yesterday. The 2008 Olympic Day Run, sponsored by the CTOC, will be held in Taipei on June 15, and will allow children and their parents to team up to take part in a 3km road run. Elementary school students can team up with either their father or mother to take part in the race. The runners will be divided into three divisions depending on age and will run from the Taipei City Government square to Anhe Road. Participants can register at the CTOC’s Web site before June 25, officials said. A total of 300 teams will be selected worldwide to take part in the Olympic road run, CTOC chairman Tsai Chen-wei (蔡辰威) said.
■HEALTH
Stroke indicator discovered
A stroke study center at Changhua Christian Hospital in Changhua County has discovered a biological indicator that can be used to help doctors better diagnose strokes and assess the condition of stroke patients during their recovery, a doctor at the hospital said yesterday. The indicator, called CSC001, can be used to monitor the patients’ recovery and determine if they are at immediate risk of suffering another stroke, Liu Ching-shan (劉青山), vice superintendent of the hospital, told a news conference. Liu said an increase in the concentration of CSC molecules in the blood indicates a high possibility of deterioration or an acute situation in the following week, even if the patient only has mild stroke symptoms. A physician will be able to decide whether to step up treatment based on the indicator, Liu said.
POLAM KOPITIAM CASE: Of the two people still in hospital, one has undergone a liver transplant and is improving, while the other is being evaluated for a liver transplant A fourth person has died from bongkrek acid poisoning linked to the Polam Kopitiam (寶林茶室) restaurant in Taipei’s Far Eastern Sogo Xinyi A13 Department Store, the Ministry of Health and Welfare said yesterday, as two other people remain seriously ill in hospital. The first death was reported on March 24. The man had been 39 years old and had eaten at the restaurant on March 22. As more cases of suspected food poisoning involving people who had eaten at the restaurant were reported by hospitals on March 26, the ministry and the Taipei Department of Health launched an investigation. The Food and
A fourth person has died in a food poisoning outbreak linked to the Xinyi (信義) branch of Malaysian restaurant chain Polam Kopitiam (寶林茶室) in Taipei, Deputy Minister of Health and Welfare Victor Wang (王必勝) said on Monday. It was the second fatality in three days, after another was announced on Saturday. The 40-year-old woman experienced multiple organ failure in the early hours on Monday, and the family decided not to undergo emergency resuscitation, Wang said. She initially showed signs of improvement after seeking medical treatment for nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, but her condition worsened due to an infection, he said. Two others who
MEDICAL: The bills would also upgrade the status of the Ethical Guidelines Governing the Research of Human Embryos and Embryonic Stem Cell Research to law The Executive Yuan yesterday approved two bills to govern regenerative medicine that aim to boost development of the field. Taiwan would reach an important milestone in regenerative medicine development with passage of the regenerative medicine act and the regenerative medicine preparations ordinance, which would allow studies to proceed and treatments to be developed, Deputy Minister of Health and Welfare Victor Wang (王必勝) told reporters at a news conference after a Cabinet meeting. Regenerative treatments have been used for several conditions, including cancer — by regenerating blood cells — and restoring joint function in soft tissue, Wang said. The draft legislation requires regenerative treatments
Taiwanese should be mindful when visiting China, as Beijing in July is likely to tighten the implementation of policies on national security following the introduction of two regulations, a researcher said on Saturday. China on Friday unveiled the regulations governing the law enforcement and judicial activities of national security agencies. They would help crack down on “illegal” and “criminal” activities that Beijing considers to be endangering national security, according to reports by China’s state media. The definition of what constitutes a national security threat in China is vague, Taiwan Thinktank researcher Wu Se-chih (吳瑟致) said. The two procedural regulations are to provide Chinese