Taipei Times: What do you think of President Chen Shui-bian's (
Gilman: The president made a good statement, and I think we should all respect that. Of course I've been a stark supporter of independence for Taiwan for many years, so I have no reluctance to support the president's statement.
TT: Do you think the relationship across the Taiwan Strait has become tenser after the president made the statement?
PHOTO: SU YUNG-YAO, TAIPEI TIMES
Gilman: I would hope the people of the People's Republic of China would recognize that some day in the future there has to be an independent Taiwan and they should stop struggling.
They both can benefit each other by economic relations, by free trade, by an open relationship between both countries. It would be beneficial to not only Taiwan but also the People's Republic of China. It's about time we stopped fretting over all of this.
TT: Do you think President Chen is stating a fact or simply inciting a military attack from Beijing?
Gilman: Well, I hope he's not inciting the military. What he's trying to do is to get people on both sides of the Strait to recognize that one day there should be independence.
TT: What about the timing? Do you think President Chen picked the right time to make the statement because Beijing is preoccupied with the 16th National Congress meeting?
Gilman: It's never a good time in the People's Republic of China's mind. So I think it has to become a reality. The more people think about it, the better they would be.
TT: Do you see any possibility for the US government to adjust its China or Taiwan policy following President Chen's controversial announcement?
Gilman: I hope that we are not going to reject it. The (US) president has said many times in the past that we want to support Taiwan's independence.
TT: What's your personal interpretation of the "one country on either side of the Taiwan Strait" idea and the "special state to state" concept that was introduced by former president Lee Teng-hui in July 1999?
Gilman: I support an independence theory, and I hope that we would one day see that independence.
TT: Do you think people in Taiwan have the right to decide their own future?
Gilman: I think it's a very important consideration.
TT: How do you see the chairwoman of the Council of Mainland Affairs, Tsai Ying-wen's (蔡英文) coming over to the United States to clarify President Chen's statement?
Gilman: I think the clarification is very important and I hope that both our administration and the People's Republic of China will care for the explanation.
Taiwan yesterday condemned the recent increase in Chinese coast guard-escorted fishing vessels operating illegally in waters around the Pratas Islands (Dongsha Islands, 東沙群島) in the South China Sea. Unusually large groupings of Chinese fishing vessels began to appear around the islands on Feb. 15, when at least six motherships and 29 smaller boats were sighted, the Coast Guard Administration (CGA) said in a news release. While CGA vessels were dispatched to expel the Chinese boats, Chinese coast guard ships trespassed into Taiwan’s restricted waters and unsuccessfully attempted to interfere, the CGA said. Due to the provocation, the CGA initiated an operation to increase
A crowd of over 200 people gathered outside the Taipei District Court as two sisters indicted for abusing a 1-year-old boy to death attended a preliminary hearing in the case yesterday afternoon. The crowd held up signs and chanted slogans calling for aggravated penalties in child abuse cases and asking for no bail and “capital punishment.” They also held white flowers in memory of the boy, nicknamed Kai Kai (剴剴), who was allegedly tortured to death by the sisters in December 2023. The boy died four months after being placed in full-time foster care with the
The Shanlan Express (山嵐號), or “Mountain Mist Express,” is scheduled to launch on April 19 as part of the centennial celebration of the inauguration of the Taitung Line. The tourism express train was renovated from the Taiwan Railway Corp’s EMU500 commuter trains. It has four carriages and a seating capacity of 60 passengers. Lion Travel is arranging railway tours for the express service. Several news outlets were invited to experience the pilot tour on the new express train service, which is to operate between Hualien Railway Station and Chihshang (池上) Railway Station in Taitung County. It would also be the first tourism service
CHANGING LANDSCAPE: Many of the part-time programs for educators were no longer needed, as many teachers obtain a graduate degree before joining the workforce, experts said Taiwanese universities this year canceled 86 programs, Ministry of Education data showed, with educators attributing the closures to the nation’s low birthrate as well as shifting trends. Fifty-three of the shuttered programs were part-time postgraduate degree programs, about 62 percent of the total, the most in the past five years, the data showed. National Taiwan Normal University (NTNU) discontinued the most part-time master’s programs, at 16: chemistry, life science, earth science, physics, fine arts, music, special education, health promotion and health education, educational psychology and counseling, education, design, Chinese as a second language, library and information sciences, mechatronics engineering, history, physical education