Despite the Minister of the Interior's back-pedalling Monday evening on comments made earlier in the day on Taipei City Government's policy on earthquake compensation, the KMT legislative caucus yesterday threatened to boycott the ministry's legislative bills and related budgets unless the minister apologizes to Taipei Mayor Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九).
"Without an apology from Yu to Mayor Ma, I will boycott him and refuse to review the legislative bills from the ministry in the (legislature's) Home and Nations' Committee," said Apollo Chen (
Chen was speaking at a press conference in the Legislative Yuan, held to make a public demand for an apology to Mayor Ma from Minister of the Interior Yu Cheng-hsien (余政憲).
He said, "Since the city's compensation standards were set by current President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁), Yu's comments were obviously aimed at attacking Ma in person, not the policy."
"What Yu needs to do is to think about helping local governments to grant as much compensation as possible to victims, but instead he has just used those victims for political combat," said KMT legislative whip Lin Yi-shih (
Mayor Ma announced Sunday that Taipei City Government would grant NT$1 million per deceased victim and NT$200,000 per seriously injured victim in Taipei City, while the Executive Yuan decided Sunday evening to pay NT$300,000 per deceased victim.
Minister Yu pledged Monday to punish the city government by postponing the ministry's contributions to the city's community activities, but changed his position in the evening.
Also on Monday morning, Premier Yu Shyi-kun, without the knowledge of Minister Yu, had issued a public assurance of the Executive Yuan's respect for the city government's right to pay the compensation it announced Sunday.
KMT lawmaker Alex Tsai (蔡正元), said, "If Yu had postponed the MOI's subventions, Taipei City, I would in the future have boycotted the ministry's budgets in the Legislative Yuan," Tsai said.
The Ministry of the Interior issued a further statement yesterday afternoon, re-emphasizing that it respected the authority of local government.
But the statement did not contain an apology.
"Whether Minister Yu apologizes to Mayor Ma is a matter for his understanding of ethics," said Wu Yu-sheng (
Taiwan is to receive the first batch of Lockheed Martin F-16 Block 70 jets from the US late this month, a defense official said yesterday, after a year-long delay due to a logjam in US arms deliveries. Completing the NT$247.2 billion (US$7.69 billion) arms deal for 66 jets would make Taiwan the third nation in the world to receive factory-fresh advanced fighter jets of the same make and model, following Bahrain and Slovakia, the official said on condition of anonymity. F-16 Block 70/72 are newly manufactured F-16 jets built by Lockheed Martin to the standards of the F-16V upgrade package. Republic of China
Taiwan-Japan Travel Passes are available for use on public transit networks in the two countries, Taoyuan Metro Corp said yesterday, adding that discounts of up to 7 percent are available. Taoyuan Metro, the Taipei MRT and Japan’s Keisei Electric Railway teamed up to develop the pass. Taoyuan Metro operates the Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport MRT Line, while Keisei Electric Railway offers express services between Tokyo’s Narita Airport, and the Keisei Ueno and Nippori stations in the Japanese capital, as well as between Narita and Haneda airports. The basic package comprises one one-way ticket on the Taoyuan MRT Line and one Skyliner ticket on
A new tropical storm formed late yesterday near Guam and is to approach closest to Taiwan on Thursday, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. Tropical Storm Pulasan became the 14th named storm of the year at 9:25pm yesterday, the agency said. As of 8am today, it was near Guam traveling northwest at 21kph, it said. The storm’s structure is relatively loose and conditions for strengthening are limited, WeatherRisk analyst Wu Sheng-yu (吳聖宇) said on Facebook. Its path is likely to be similar to Typhoon Bebinca, which passed north of Taiwan over Japan’s Ryukyu Islands and made landfall in Shanghai this morning, he said. However, it
COLD FACTS: ‘Snow skin’ mooncakes, made with a glutinous rice skin and kept at a low temperature, have relatively few calories compared with other mooncakes Traditional mooncakes are a typical treat for many Taiwanese in the lead-up to the Mid-Autumn Festival, but a Taipei-based dietitian has urged people not to eat more than one per day and not to have them every day due to their high fat and calorie content. As mooncakes contain a lot of oil and sugar, they can have negative health effects on older people and those with diabetes, said Lai Yu-han (賴俞含), a dietitian at Taipei Hospital of the Ministry of Health and Welfare. “The maximum you can have is one mooncake a day, and do not eat them every day,” Lai