Taipei City is set to ask the Ministry of Transportation to assume responsibility for formulating a plan for managing traffic between Taipei’s Nangang District (南港), New Taipei City’s Sijhih (汐止) and Keelung City, Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je (柯文哲) said yesterday.
“This morning I’ve already signed the official documents,” he said. “The ministry’s Institute of Traffic and Transportation should be asked to pool together different views because the road in question is extremely complicated. Public transport as well as the MRT and Taiwan Railway lines must also be considered.”
How costs should be split for proposed MRT lines from Taipei to Sijhih and Keelung have caused issues for Ko, who previously held back from a full endorsement of the project.
Ko made his remarks after the “Twin Cities Forum” held yesterday between the governments of Taipei and New Taipei City. The annual forum provides a venue for the cities’ mayors and commissioners to discuss cross-city cooperation.
After the forum, Ko and Chu announced that an agreement had been reached regarding usage of the 2017 Universiade’s athletic village in New Taipei City’s Linkou District (林口) following the event.
Chu said that the cities would split the ownership of the village’s housing equally.
He expressed hope that the whole of the village would be opened to renters from around Taipei.
When Ko was asked whether New Taipei City would participate in the rental corporation currently being organized by Taipei, Chu interrupted Ko’s reply, saying that both cities would mutually cooperate.
A group of Taiwanese-American and Tibetan-American students at Harvard University on Saturday disrupted Chinese Ambassador to the US Xie Feng’s (謝鋒) speech at the school, accusing him of being responsible for numerous human rights violations. Four students — two Taiwanese Americans and two from Tibet — held up banners inside a conference hall where Xie was delivering a speech at the opening ceremony of the Harvard Kennedy School China Conference 2024. In a video clip provided by the Coalition of Students Resisting the CCP (Chinese Communist Party), Taiwanese-American Cosette Wu (吳亭樺) and Tibetan-American Tsering Yangchen are seen holding banners that together read:
UNAWARE: Many people sit for long hours every day and eat unhealthy foods, putting them at greater risk of developing one of the ‘three highs,’ an expert said More than 30 percent of adults aged 40 or older who underwent a government-funded health exam were unaware they had at least one of the “three highs” — high blood pressure, high blood lipids or high blood sugar, the Health Promotion Administration (HPA) said yesterday. Among adults aged 40 or older who said they did not have any of the “three highs” before taking the health exam, more than 30 percent were found to have at least one of them, Adult Preventive Health Examination Service data from 2022 showed. People with long-term medical conditions such as hypertension or diabetes usually do not
POLICE INVESTIGATING: A man said he quit his job as a nurse at Taipei Tzu Chi Hospital as he had been ‘disgusted’ by the behavior of his colleagues A man yesterday morning wrote online that he had witnessed nurses taking photographs and touching anesthetized patients inappropriately in Taipei Tzu Chi Hospital’s operating theaters. The man surnamed Huang (黃) wrote on the Professional Technology Temple bulletin board that during his six-month stint as a nurse at the hospital, he had seen nurses taking pictures of patients, including of their private parts, after they were anesthetized. Some nurses had also touched patients inappropriately and children were among those photographed, he said. Huang said this “disgusted” him “so much” that “he felt the need to reveal these unethical acts in the operating theater
Heat advisories were in effect for nine administrative regions yesterday afternoon as warm southwesterly winds pushed temperatures above 38°C in parts of southern Taiwan, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. As of 3:30pm yesterday, Tainan’s Yujing District (玉井) had recorded the day’s highest temperature of 39.7°C, though the measurement will not be included in Taiwan’s official heat records since Yujing is an automatic rather than manually operated weather station, the CWA said. Highs recorded in other areas were 38.7°C in Kaohsiung’s Neimen District (內門), 38.2°C in Chiayi City and 38.1°C in Pingtung’s Sandimen Township (三地門), CWA data showed. The spell of scorching