The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has proposed plans to advance its “Africa Project,” aiming to expand Taiwan’s diplomatic relations with countries on the continent.
During her trip to Eswatini in September last year, President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) instructed the government to further advance the Africa Project, as she learned that many African countries were interested and supported the initiative.
The ministry has laid out five goals to move the project forward in a report submitted to the Legislative Yuan.
Photo: CNA
It proposed assisting Taiwanese businesspeople based in Africa to boost local markets and continue to explore the possibility of doing business in major countries in the region.
The plan is also aims to cultivate talent through government scholarships so that more students from African countries to study in Taiwan.
To promote specializing in African affairs, the ministry would encourage higher education institutions in Taiwan and African countries to establish sister-school ties as well as advocate for Taiwanese to study, conduct research or join internship programs in Africa.
Taiwan should also expand cooperation with African countries on women’s empowerment, climate change, food security and youth exchanges, the report says.
Fostering female entrepreneurs would help alleviate youth unemployment issues in some African countries, while collaborating on climate change and food security issues would create business opportunities for Taiwan’s renewable energy and agricultural biotechnology industries, it says.
Taiwanese businesses in Africa are encouraged to hire young local people to ease labor shortages and English teachers from Eswatini could be encouraged to teach in Taiwan, it says.
The ministry also proposed working with the Ministry of Economic Affairs and the Overseas Community Affairs Council to collect opinions from Taiwanese living or working in Africa to prepare informed action plans to deepen relations and economic exchanges between Taiwan and African countries.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it would continue seeking input from agencies to finalize its plan, which the legislature is to deliberate and vote on.
Launched in 2019, the Africa Project has facilitated the establishment of the Republic of Somaliland Representative Office in Taiwan and the Taiwan Representative Office in the Republic of Somaliland in 2020, and the reopening of the Taipei Representative Office in the Ivory Coast in 2022.
Taiwan also has an embassy in Eswatini and three other missions in Africa: the Taipei Trade Office in the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Taipei Liaison Office in the Republic of South Africa and the Taipei Liaison Office in Cape Town.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday said it is closely monitoring developments in Venezuela, and would continue to cooperate with democratic allies and work together for regional and global security, stability, and prosperity. The remarks came after the US on Saturday launched a series of airstrikes in Venezuela and kidnapped Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, who was later flown to New York along with his wife. The pair face US charges related to drug trafficking and alleged cooperation with gangs designated as terrorist organizations. Maduro has denied the allegations. The ministry said that it is closely monitoring the political and economic situation
Conflict with Taiwan could leave China with “massive economic disruption, catastrophic military losses, significant social unrest, and devastating sanctions,” a US think tank said in a report released on Monday. The German Marshall Fund released a report titled If China Attacks Taiwan: The Consequences for China of “Minor Conflict” and “Major War” Scenarios. The report details the “massive” economic, military, social and international costs to China in the event of a minor conflict or major war with Taiwan, estimating that the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) could sustain losses of more than half of its active-duty ground forces, including 100,000 troops. Understanding Chinese
UNRELENTING: China attempted cyberattacks on Taiwan’s critical infrastructure 2.63 million times per day last year, up from 1.23 million in 2023, the NSB said China’s cyberarmy has long engaged in cyberattacks against Taiwan’s critical infrastructure, employing diverse and evolving tactics, the National Security Bureau (NSB) said yesterday, adding that cyberattacks on critical energy infrastructure last year increased 10-fold compared with the previous year. The NSB yesterday released a report titled Analysis on China’s Cyber Threats to Taiwan’s Critical Infrastructure in 2025, outlining the number of cyberattacks, major tactics and hacker groups. Taiwan’s national intelligence community identified a large number of cybersecurity incidents last year, the bureau said in a statement. China’s cyberarmy last year launched an average of 2.63 million intrusion attempts per day targeting Taiwan’s critical
‘SLICING METHOD’: In the event of a blockade, the China Coast Guard would intercept Taiwanese ships while its navy would seek to deter foreign intervention China’s military drills around Taiwan this week signaled potential strategies to cut the nation off from energy supplies and foreign military assistance, a US think tank report said. The Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) conducted what it called “Justice Mission 2025” exercises from Monday to Tuesday in five maritime zones and airspace around Taiwan, calling them a warning to “Taiwanese independence” forces. In a report released on Wednesday, the Institute for the Study of War said the exercises effectively simulated blocking shipping routes to major port cities, including Kaohsiung, Keelung and Hualien. Taiwan would be highly vulnerable under such a blockade, because it