Police arrested a retired military officer who allegedly sold military secrets to China, Central News Agency reported yesterday.
Colonel Wang Hui-hsien (王惠賢), 42, a former member of the Military Intelligence Bureau (MIB), was detained early yesterday after being questioned by prosecutors at the Taiwan High Court, the report said.
Wang was in charge of analyzing intelligence on China. He retired six years ago and was allegedly recruited by Chinese agents in Shanghai.
Wang allegedly leaked data to China about the deployment of MIB spies in China. When he returned to Taiwan in 2005, he tried to recruit fellow retired MIB members to spy for China.
Following a tip, police arrested Wang on Thursday at his Taipei home. Wang has confessed to passing information to China in exchange for preferential treatment while doing business in China, the report said.
Additional reporting by staff writer
Taiwanese paleontologists have discovered fossil evidence that pythons up to 4m long inhabited Taiwan during the Pleistocene epoch, reporting their findings in the international scientific journal Historical Biology. National Taiwan University (NTU) Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology associate professor Tsai Cheng-hsiu (蔡政修) led the team that discovered the largest snake fossil ever found in Taiwan. The single trunk vertebra was discovered in Tainan at the Chiting Formation, dated to between 400,000 and 800,000 years ago in the Middle Pleistocene, the paper said. The area also produced Taiwan’s first avian fossil, as well as crocodile, mammoth, saber-toothed cat and rhinoceros fossils, it said. Discoveries
Taiwanese paleontologists have discovered fossil evidence that pythons up to 4m long inhabited Taiwan during the Pleistocene epoch, reporting their findings in the international scientific journal Historical Biology. National Taiwan University (NTU) Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology associate professor Tsai Cheng-hsiu (蔡政修) led the team that discovered the largest snake fossil ever found in Taiwan. A single trunk vertebra was discovered in Tainan at the Chiting Formation, dated to between 800,000 to 400,000 years ago in the Middle Pleistocene, the paper said. The area also produced Taiwan’s first avian fossil, as well as crocodile, mammoth, sabre-toothed cat and rhinoceros fossils, it said. Discoveries
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