The Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied a media report yesterday that the ministry was opposed to an ambitious Cabinet project to double the number of tourist arrivals by 2007.
"The report was completely wrong," the ministry said in a news release, adding that it has ordered all embassies and representative offices abroad to assist in implementing various tourist promotion programs under the new "tourist doubling" project.
Noting that the ultimate working goal of all foreign ministry staff is to boost overall national interests, the press statement said the ministry has no reason to boycott the tourist promotion program which would not only increase national revenue but could also help upgrade Taiwan's international visibility and help foreign nationals better understand Taiwan's political democratization and economic development.
As to the media report alleging that some overseas foreign ministry staff members have concurrently served as tourist agents for travel services for extra income, the ministry said it has never heard of such a practice.
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairman Eric Chu (朱立倫), spokeswoman Yang Chih-yu (楊智伃) and Legislator Hsieh Lung-chieh (謝龍介) would be summoned by police for questioning for leading an illegal assembly on Thursday evening last week, Minister of the Interior Liu Shyh-fang (劉世芳) said today. The three KMT officials led an assembly outside the Taipei City Prosecutors’ Office, a restricted area where public assembly is not allowed, protesting the questioning of several KMT staff and searches of KMT headquarters and offices in a recall petition forgery case. Chu, Yang and Hsieh are all suspected of contravening the Assembly and Parade Act (集會遊行法) by holding
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