HOLIDAYS
Holidays set for 2018
Workers are to receive 115 days off work next year, with six extended public holidays, the longest being the six-day Lunar New Year holiday, the Directorate-General of Personnel Administration said yesterday. The six extended holidays are: Republic of China (ROC) Founding Day (three days), Lunar New Year (six), Children’s Day and Tomb Sweeping Day (five), Dragon Boat Festival (three) and Mid-Autumn Festival (three), while the ROC Founding Day in 2019 will be four days. Officials said that whenever a public holiday falls on a Tuesday or Thursday, the agency will make arrangements to turn it into an extended holiday, with the previous Saturday used as an official work day. For example, Tomb Sweeping Day next year falls on a Thursday, so Friday, April 6, will be included in a five-day public holiday, with the previous Saturday, March 31, a work day.
AGRICULTURE
Losses top NT$90 million
As of 5pm yesterday, the nation posted NT$90.58 million (US$3.01 million) in agricultural losses over the past few days as a result of torrential rains brought by a slow-moving weather front, the Council of Agriculture said. Agricultural product losses amounted to NT$67.26 million, it added. Yunlin County was the hardest hit municipality, with agricultural losses of NT$25.91 million, or 29 percent of the total, followed by New Taipei City with NT$17.8 million, Koahsiung with NT$10.02 million and Nantou with NT$9.58 million, the council said. Across the nation, 3,472 hectares of crops were damaged; 1,480 hectares of which were rice fields that accounted for NT$14.01 million in losses, while watermelon, corn, peanut and tomato cultivation was also hard hit, the council said. Poultry and livestock losses amounted to NT$8.49 million, while fishery losses totaled NT$1.76 million, the council said, adding that other losses were estimated at NT$13.06 million and included flooding or erosion of farm lands and damage to farm equipment.
CRIME
Red light trips up suspect
A 63-year-old man wanted on fraud charges for 24 years was caught yesterday after running a red light in Kaohsiung’s Lingya District (苓雅), police said. The man, surnamed Chang (張), told police he missed the red light because he could not see the traffic lights clearly. Chang initially gave the police a fake ID number, but the officers became suspicious when the picture did not match the number. Asked again for his ID, Chang pretended to faint, but banged his head on the car floor and started bleeding. Police rushed him to a nearby hospital, where on further questioning he revealed his real identity. He had been wanted since 1993 on suspicion of forging securities, and the statute of limitations on the charges would have run out next year, police said.
CRIME
Drug suspect arrested
A Taiwanese man was arrested on Saturday in Manila on suspicion of drug trafficking, a spokesman for the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) said on Sunday. PDEA agents and police posing as drug buyers arrested the man, 56, at a Manila hotel, an agency spokesman said. Agents found 50kg of crystals in a container used to store dried fish in his car. If the crystals are identified as amphetamines, their street value would be about 250 million Philippine pesos (US$5.17 million), the spokesman said. If tried and found guilty, the suspect could be sentenced to life in prison.
SOCIETY
Divorce rate rises
There were 53,850 divorces in the nation last year, among which marriages that had lasted less than five years accounted for the majority, statistics released by the Ministry of the Interior showed. The divorce rate last year exceeded that of the previous year by 402, the statistics showed, with an average of 147.5 couples getting divorced per day last year. The numbers indicate a trend toward high divorce rates among couples who have been married for less than five years. Short marriages accounted for 33.6 percent of the total divorces last year, the ministry said. Coming in second were couples who had been married for five to nine years, making up 20.7 percent of the total divorces. Data compiled over the past decade showed that the divorce rate fluctuated between 2007 and last year, the ministry said. The average annual divorce number for 2007 to 2012 was roughly 57,000, with the figure dropping to about 53,000 from 2013 to last year.
SOCIETY
Fourteen share lottery
Fourteen people won the NT$10 million (US$332,336) special prize, while 13 won the NT$2 million grand prize in the March-April uniform invoice lottery, the Ministry of Finance said on Friday last week. Winners can claim their prizes from June 6 to Sept. 5, the ministry said. Among the 14 invoices that won the special prize, two were issued by 7-Eleven convenience stores for purchases of NT$65. The stores are in Taipei’s Zhongshan (中山) and Zhongzheng (中正) districts. Another convenience store, FamilyMart, also issued two special prize-winning invoices. The buyers spent NT$60 and NT$78 to buy instant noodles and cigarettes at stores in New Taipei City’s Sanchong District (三重) and Taichung respectively.
The Taipei Department of Health yesterday said it has launched a probe into a restaurant at Far Eastern Sogo Xinyi A13 Department Store after a customer died of suspected food poisoning. A preliminary investigation on Sunday found missing employee health status reports and unsanitary kitchen utensils at Polam Kopitiam (寶林茶室) in the department store’s basement food court, the department said. No direct relationship between the food poisoning death and the restaurant was established, as no food from the day of the incident was available for testing and no other customers had reported health complaints, it said, adding that the investigation is ongoing. Later
REVENGE TRAVEL: A surge in ticket prices should ease this year, but inflation would likely keep tickets at a higher price than before the pandemic Scoot is to offer six additional flights between Singapore and Northeast Asia, with all routes transiting Taipei from April 1, as the budget airline continues to resume operations that were paused during the COVID-19 pandemic, a Scoot official said on Thursday. Vice president of sales Lee Yong Sin (李榮新) said at a gathering with reporters in Taipei that the number of flights from Singapore to Japan and South Korea with a stop in Taiwan would increase from 15 to 21 each week. That change means the number of the Singapore-Taiwan-Tokyo flights per week would increase from seven to 12, while Singapore-Taiwan-Seoul
POOR PREPARATION: Cultures can form on food that is out of refrigeration for too long and cooking does not reliably neutralize their toxins, an epidemiologist said Medical professionals yesterday said that suspected food poisoning deaths revolving around a restaurant at Far Eastern Department Store Xinyi A13 Store in Taipei could have been caused by one of several types of bacterium. Ho Mei-shang (何美鄉), an epidemiologist at Academia Sinica’s Institute of Biomedical Sciences, wrote on Facebook that the death of a 39-year-old customer of the restaurant suggests the toxin involved was either “highly potent or present in massive large quantities.” People who ate at the restaurant showed symptoms within hours of consuming the food, suggesting that the poisoning resulted from contamination by a toxin and not infection of the
BAD NEIGHBORS: China took fourth place among countries spreading disinformation, with Hong Kong being used as a hub to spread propaganda, a V-Dem study found Taiwan has been rated as the country most affected by disinformation for the 11th consecutive year in a study by the global research project Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem). The nation continues to be a target of disinformation originating from China, and Hong Kong is increasingly being used as a base from which to disseminate that disinformation, the report said. After Taiwan, Latvia and Palestine ranked second and third respectively, while Nicaragua, North Korea, Venezuela and China, in that order, were the countries that spread the most disinformation, the report said. Each country listed in the report was given a score,