An election year “struggle” agenda was announced yesterday by labor groups, who called on major parties to make clear their positions on pensions, long-term healthcare, union law and other long-standing concerns.
Members of the National Alliance for Workers of Closed Factories, Freeway Toll Collector Self-Help Association and numerous unions gathered on Ketagalan Boulevard to lay out their demands for the election year.
“We want to ... highlight how the Chinese Nationalist Party [KMT] has exploited us while in government, and make the Democratic Progressive Party [DPP] see that they are not going to be able to step on us if they govern again,” National Alliance for Workers of Closed Factories member Lu Chih-hung (盧其宏) said.
Photo: Chu Pei-hsiung, Taipei Times
The alliance opposes the proposed pension cuts, Lu said, calling for the system to be expanded to include a “base pension” that would guarantee a basic standard of living.
National Alliance for Workers of Closed Factories member Wu Jing-ru (吳靜如) said that the current pension system fails to provide a meaningful universal guarantee because benefits vary based on income and profession, disadvantaging the poor and long-term unemployed.
She also called for the establishment of a meaningful, government sponsored long-term care system for elderly and disabled people.
“Caregivers for the elderly, including both family members and foreign workers, are in a ‘sweat blood’ situation where they have to spend decades of their life working more than 10 hours a day to care for someone,” she said, adding that the law should be reformed to allow foreign caregivers to take time off and be included under the Labor Standards Act (勞動基準法).
In the long run, all foreign caregivers should be hired through the government to prevent exploitation, she said.
Government hiring practices were also criticized by activists, who said that most employees — other than civil servants — are hired on an informal basis that denies them important labor benefits such as pensions.
Lu said government claims that the purpose of using informal employment is to allow “flexibility” were “a lie” because many people have been working for decades, yet still fail to accumulate the “seniority” that serves as the basis for national pension calculations because they are not formal employees.
Activists called on the government to only hire workers on a formal basis and to compensate existing employees for the years of “seniority” that they had not been allowed to accumulate.
NATIONAL SECURITY: Authorities are working to confirm the identities of the military personnel involved and investigating possible illegal conduct and regulatory violations Authorities are probing possible national security implications after Kinmen police and immigration officers on Sunday found a Chinese woman allegedly posing as a tourist while engaging in prostitution involving more than 10 military personnel. The woman, surnamed Chen (陳), has since been deported, authorities said, adding that investigators are still working to confirm the identities of those implicated, as the records only listed code names and aliases. The case stemmed from a report received by the Kinmen District Prosecutors’ Office on Friday last week from the Jinhu Precinct of the Kinmen County Police Bureau. On Sunday, police, along with the National Immigration
GLOBALGIVING: ‘ Caving to external pressure is not acceptable for an organization that has cultivated justice reform and human rights for 30 years,’ one NGO said A slew of non-government organizations (NGOs) have withdrawn from the GlobalGiving fundraising platform after it announced it would use “Chinese Taipei” instead of “Taiwan” from next month. The Taiwan Good Rice Association wrote on Facebook on Friday that it was informed on April 28 via a teleconference call of the change, which was made because the platform wanted to operate in China. Taiwan Good Rice is to terminate all cooperative relationships with GlobalGiving in response to the platform’s “unilateral and non-negotiable” decision to remove references to Taiwan, the NGO said. “Taiwan is in the official name of Taiwan Good Rice Association and the
HEAVY WEATHER: Typhoon Jangmi is due to crash straight into the Ryukyus as airlines look to shift flights to larger aircraft or cancel flights to Okinawa entirely Taiwan’s international air carriers announced flight adjustments over the weekend as Typhoon Jangmi is forecast to hit the Ryukyu Islands today and tomorrow. The Central Weather Administration (CWA) upgraded Jangmi from a tropical storm to a typhoon at 8am yesterday, with the eye located 580km south of Naha city. It was moving north at 19kph. Today, China Airlines’ CI-120, CI-121, CI-122 and CI-123 flights between Taoyuan and Naha, Okinawa, have been canceled as well as CI-132 and CI-133 between Kaohsiung and Naha. EVA Air’s BR-112, BR-113, BR-186 and BR-185 flights between Taoyuan and Naha are also canceled. Low-cost carrier Tigerair Taiwan canceled IT-230,
MULTIPRONGED APPROACH: China has sought to pressure Palau across a number of fronts, but the island nation has staunchly resisted overtures to ditch Taiwan Palau has been firm in backing Taiwan despite Chinese pressure that uses tourism economics, cyberattacks and criminal infiltration as tools to threaten the Pacific ally into renouncing its recognition of Taiwan as a sovereign state. The Presidential Office yesterday announced that Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴) would visit Palau from Saturday to Wednesday next week at the invitation of Palauan President Surangel Whipps Jr. Whipps in April said in an interview that China had outspokenly asked Palau to “denounce Taiwan.” “And we have said: ‘We have no enemies, but nobody tells us who our friends are,’” he said. Whipps has told reporters multiple times