The Public Construction Commission announced a Web site for Morakot victims and others to keep abreast of rescue and relief efforts.
The Government Information Office (GIO) is posting developments at info.gio.gov.tw/mp.asp?mp=1.
The site provides details about cash relief, subsidies, medical services, taxes and education and employment assistance in the wake of the devastation.
The GIO said families whose loved ones were killed or are not found are eligible for compensation of NT$1 million (US$30,488) per person. Families whose members have suffered severe injuries are entitled to NT$250,000 per person.
Meanwhile, local governments will provide relocation funding to families whose homes have been destroyed by flooding or mudslides. The grants will amount to NT$20,000 per person, with a maximum of NT$100,000 per household, the GIO said in a statement.
The Relief Disaster Foundation under the Ministry of the Interior is also offering flood victims a choice of either NT$10,000 per person in relocation funds for up to five people per household; NT$3,000 per person to rent housing for up to six months for up to three people per household; or NT$20,000 in flood compensation per household.
Those who believe they are eligible should contact local authorities to apply, a foundation official said.
Taiwan would benefit from more integrated military strategies and deployments if the US and its allies treat the East China Sea, the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea as a “single theater of operations,” a Taiwanese military expert said yesterday. Shen Ming-shih (沈明室), a researcher at the Institute for National Defense and Security Research, said he made the assessment after two Japanese military experts warned of emerging threats from China based on a drill conducted this month by the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) Eastern Theater Command. Japan Institute for National Fundamentals researcher Maki Nakagawa said the drill differed from the
‘WORSE THAN COMMUNISTS’: President William Lai has cracked down on his political enemies and has attempted to exterminate all opposition forces, the chairman said The legislature would motion for a presidential recall after May 20, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairman Eric Chu (朱立倫) said yesterday at a protest themed “against green communists and dictatorship” in Taipei. Taiwan is supposed to be a peaceful homeland where people are united, but President William Lai (賴清德) has been polarizing and tearing apart society since his inauguration, Chu said. Lai must show his commitment to his job, otherwise a referendum could be initiated to recall him, he said. Democracy means the rule of the people, not the rule of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), but Lai has failed to fulfill his
A rally held by opposition parties yesterday demonstrates that Taiwan is a democratic country, President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday, adding that if opposition parties really want to fight dictatorship, they should fight it on Tiananmen Square in Beijing. The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) held a protest with the theme “against green communists and dictatorship,” and was joined by the Taiwan People’s Party. Lai said the opposition parties are against what they called the “green communists,” but do not fight against the “Chinese communists,” adding that if they really want to fight dictatorship, they should go to the right place and face
A 79-year-old woman died today after being struck by a train at a level crossing in Taoyuan, police said. The woman, identified by her surname Wang (王), crossed the tracks even though the barriers were down in Jhongli District’s (中壢) Neili (內壢) area, the Taoyuan Branch of the Railway Police Bureau said. Surveillance footage showed that the railway barriers were lowered when Wang entered the crossing, but why she ventured onto the track remains under investigation, the police said. Police said they received a report of an incident at 6:41am involving local train No. 2133 that was heading from Keelung to Chiayi City. Investigators