US President George W. Bush and top aides began lobbying the other 14 UN Security Council members for a new resolution the White House billed on Friday as a final test of UN willingness to disarm Iraq.
Bush set off the lobbying round with a phone call from his ranch in Texas to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, expressing support for the council as the US and Britain prepare to offer a resolution next week that would set the stage for a possible war to enforce UN disarmament demands of Iraq.
The resistance of Security Council veto-holders France, Russia, and China to an early war make the US quest for a resolution authorizing force an uphill battle.
Secretary of State Colin Powell called the foreign ministers of Security Council members Bulgaria, Mexico and Chile as he flew to Japan to start a four-day Asian trip.
"I told all of them that we are at work on language for another resolution and that we expected to table such a resolution early next week," Powell told reporters on his plane.
Powell said he expected the resolution to be "straightforward, direct."
It would say that Iraq had not complied with a Security Council disarmament resolution adopted last November and, "therefore the council has to consider appropriate action on the resolution or other action the council might choose to take."
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer suggested the new resolution would be a final opportunity for the UN to act before the US bypasses the body to lead its own coalition to oust Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and eliminate Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction programs.
"Given the fact that this is in reality the 18th resolution [on Iraq], the president does not think there needs to be a 19th. So this is a very important moment for the United Nations to decide whether or not it will act," Fleischer said.
Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Powell and national security adviser Condoleezza Rice are expected to contact leaders of each Security Council member in the coming days, discussing the language of the resolution and seeking support, Fleischer said.
"There are 15 votes. Every vote is important," he said. Germany, however, was already expected to vote against any measure paving the way for war on Iraq, he added.
South Korea has adjusted its electronic arrival card system to no longer list Taiwan as a part of China, a move that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said would help facilitate exchanges between the two sides. South Korea previously listed “Taiwan” as “Taiwan (China)” in the drop-down menus of its online arrival card system, where people had to fill out where they came from and their next destination. The ministry had requested South Korea make a revision and said it would change South Korea’s name on Taiwan’s online immigration system from “Republic of Korea” to “Korea (South),” should the issue not be
Tainan, Taipei and New Taipei City recorded the highest fines nationwide for illegal accommodations in the first quarter of this year, with fines issued in the three cities each exceeding NT$7 million (US$220,639), Tourism Administration data showed. Among them, Taipei had the highest number of illegal short-term rental units, with 410. There were 3,280 legally registered hotels nationwide in the first quarter, down by 14 properties, or 0.43 percent, from a year earlier, likely indicating operators exiting the market, the agency said. However, the number of unregistered properties rose to 1,174, including 314 illegal hotels and 860 illegal short-term rental
Both sides of the Taiwan Strait share a political foundation based on the “1992 consensus” and opposition to Taiwanese independence, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun (鄭麗文) today said during her meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平). Both sides of the Strait should plan and build institutionalized and sustainable mechanisms for dialogue and cooperation based on that foundation to make peaceful development across the Strait irreversible, she said. Peace is a shared moral value across the Strait, and both sides should move beyond political confrontation to seek institutionalized solutions to prevent war, she said. Mutually beneficial cross-strait relations are what the
ECONOMIC COERCION: Such actions are often inconsistently applied, sometimes resumed, and sometimes just halted, the Presidential Office spokeswoman said The government backs healthy and orderly cross-strait exchanges, but such arrangements should not be made with political conditions attached and never be used as leverage for political maneuvering or partisan agendas, Presidential Office spokeswoman Karen Kuo (郭雅慧) said yesterday. Kuo made the remarks after China earlier in the day announced 10 new “incentive measures” for Taiwan, following a landmark meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) and Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun (鄭麗文) in Beijing on Friday. The measures, unveiled by China’s Xinhua news agency, include plans to resume individual travel by residents of Shanghai and China’s Fujian