Officials of the Council of Agricul-ture yesterday admitted that relations between the authorities and farmers' associations have turned sour since the Ministry of Finance launched a monetary reform campaign aimed at local financial institutions in mid-August.
Agricultural officials said that the tension between the DPP administration and the local farmers' associations was obvious, and the forthcoming elections of legislators as well as mayors and county magistrates have complicated the confrontation.
The Bureau of Monetary Affairs under the finance ministry and the Central Deposit Insurance Corp (中央存保) on Aug. 10 put under supervision 36 local financial institutions, 27 of which were credit departments of farmers' associations.
In early September, the finance ministry announced that 35 local financial institutions, mostly credit departments of farmers' associations, would be taken over by public banks in mid-September. Employees of these associations, being laid off without proper compensation, took to the streets to protest against the indifference of the authorities.
Farmers' associations were traditionally strongholds of political parties in terms of votes. Well aware of the associations' role in the Dec. 1 elections, Minister of Finance Yen Ching-chang (顏慶章) and Chairman Chen Hsi-huang (陳希煌) of the Council of Agriculture in the past weeks have visited executives of several farmers' associations in Pingtung, Kaohsiung and Tainan.
The opposition parties, on the other hand, have sought to secure votes through their old connections. Former agricultural officials of the KMT-ruling era also increased contacts with their old acquaintances at the farmers' associations.
The Council of Agriculture is trying hard to win favor from the farmers' associations. Chen has given his personal guarantee that the authorities won't institute another round of clean-up reforms at farmers' associations credit departments, as had been rumored.
A Chinese aircraft carrier group entered Japan’s economic waters over the weekend, before exiting to conduct drills involving fighter jets, the Japanese Ministry of Defense said yesterday. The Liaoning aircraft carrier, two missile destroyers and one fast combat supply ship sailed about 300km southwest of Japan’s easternmost island of Minamitori on Saturday, a ministry statement said. It was the first time a Chinese aircraft carrier had entered that part of Japan’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), a ministry spokesman said. “We think the Chinese military is trying to improve its operational capability and ability to conduct operations in distant areas,” the spokesman said. China’s growing
Taiwan yesterday denied Chinese allegations that its military was behind a cyberattack on a technology company in Guangzhou, after city authorities issued warrants for 20 suspects. The Guangzhou Municipal Public Security Bureau earlier yesterday issued warrants for 20 people it identified as members of the Information, Communications and Electronic Force Command (ICEFCOM). The bureau alleged they were behind a May 20 cyberattack targeting the backend system of a self-service facility at the company. “ICEFCOM, under Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party, directed the illegal attack,” the warrant says. The bureau placed a bounty of 10,000 yuan (US$1,392) on each of the 20 people named in
Nine retired generals from Taiwan, Japan and the US have been invited to participate in a tabletop exercise hosted by the Taipei School of Economics and Political Science Foundation tomorrow and Wednesday that simulates a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan in 2030, the foundation said yesterday. The five retired Taiwanese generals would include retired admiral Lee Hsi-min (李喜明), joined by retired US Navy admiral Michael Mullen and former chief of staff of the Japan Self-Defense Forces general Shigeru Iwasaki, it said. The simulation aims to offer strategic insights into regional security and peace in the Taiwan Strait, it added. Foundation chair Huang Huang-hsiung
PUBLIC WARNING: The two students had been tricked into going to Hong Kong for a ‘high-paying’ job, which sent them to a scam center in Cambodia Police warned the public not to trust job advertisements touting high pay abroad following the return of two college students over the weekend who had been trafficked and forced to work at a cyberscam center in Cambodia. The two victims, surnamed Lee (李), 18, and Lin (林), 19, were interviewed by police after landing in Taiwan on Saturday. Taichung’s Chingshui Police Precinct said in a statement yesterday that the two students are good friends, and Lin had suspended her studies after seeing the ad promising good pay to work in Hong Kong. Lee’s grandfather on Thursday reported to police that Lee had sent