The number of cases of child abuse being reported to the authorities is on the rise, according to a report released yesterday.
As part of an awareness campaign marking Women's and Children's Day in Taiwan, the Child Welfare League Foundation and six child-welfare protection groups published a report detailing the 10 most serious problems facing children and teenagers.
According to government statistics from the past few years, the 10 most serious problems, in no particular order, are: a declining birthrate; difficulties in establishing an identity; lack of child care; physical abuse; psychological problems; dropping out of school; obsession with the Internet; lack of recreational facilities; sexual abuse and the influence of the sex trade.
"All these problems add up to great challenges and hardships faced by local youngsters in the course of their development," said CWLF Chief Executive Feng Yen (馮燕).
According to statistics from the Children's Bureau under the Ministry of the Interior, there were 4,466 cases of child abuse last year, compared with 2,868 in 1997. More than 80 percent of the cases involved the children's parents.
Director of the Children's Bureau, Liu Pang-fu (劉邦富), however, said the public should not worry too much about the apparent rise in the number of cases.
"The increasing number is because the reporting system is improving, which doesn't mean the actual incidence of child abuse is rising," Liu told the Taipei Times.
According to the report, 5,000 to 6,000 children were abandoned in Taiwan last year, and about 18,000 mentally handicapped babies were born.
One of the more worrisome findings in the report is that the number of school dropouts is increasing by about 700 a year, Feng said.
With the Internet gaining popularity among schoolchildren and teenagers, Feng said, the number of youngsters who run away from home because of their online obsessions is also rising steadily, while a lack of recreational opportunities for children and adolescents is becoming more acute.
A strong continental cold air mass and abundant moisture bringing snow to mountains 3,000m and higher over the past few days are a reminder that more than 60 years ago Taiwan had an outdoor ski resort that gradually disappeared in part due to climate change. On Oct. 24, 2021, the National Development Council posted a series of photographs on Facebook recounting the days when Taiwan had a ski resort on Hehuanshan (合歡山) in Nantou County. More than 60 years ago, when developing a branch of the Central Cross-Island Highway, the government discovered that Hehuanshan, with an elevation of more than 3,100m,
Death row inmate Huang Lin-kai (黃麟凱), who was convicted for the double murder of his former girlfriend and her mother, is to be executed at the Taipei Detention Center tonight, the Ministry of Justice announced. Huang, who was a military conscript at the time, was convicted for the rape and murder of his ex-girlfriend, surnamed Wang (王), and the murder of her mother, after breaking into their home on Oct. 1, 2013. Prosecutors cited anger over the breakup and a dispute about money as the motives behind the double homicide. This is the first time that Minister of Justice Cheng Ming-chien (鄭銘謙) has
SECURITY: To protect the nation’s Internet cables, the navy should use buoys marking waters within 50m of them as a restricted zone, a former navy squadron commander said A Chinese cargo ship repeatedly intruded into Taiwan’s contiguous and sovereign waters for three months before allegedly damaging an undersea Internet cable off Kaohsiung, a Liberty Times (sister paper of the Taipei Times) investigation revealed. Using publicly available information, the Liberty Times was able to reconstruct the Shunxing-39’s movements near Taiwan since Double Ten National Day last year. Taiwanese officials did not respond to the freighter’s intrusions until Friday last week, when the ship, registered in Cameroon and Tanzania, turned off its automatic identification system shortly before damage was inflicted to a key cable linking Taiwan to the rest of
TRANSPORT CONVENIENCE: The new ticket gates would accept a variety of mobile payment methods, and buses would be installed with QR code readers for ease of use New ticketing gates for the Taipei metro system are expected to begin service in October, allowing users to swipe with cellphones and select credit cards partnered with Taipei Rapid Transit Corp (TRTC), the company said on Tuesday. TRTC said its gates in use are experiencing difficulty due to their age, as they were first installed in 2007. Maintenance is increasingly expensive and challenging as the manufacturing of components is halted or becoming harder to find, the company said. Currently, the gates only accept EasyCard, iPass and electronic icash tickets, or one-time-use tickets purchased at kiosks, the company said. Since 2023, the company said it