Taiwan's representative to the UK, Tien Hung-mao (
"British officials indeed have exerted `moderate pressure' on Taiwan over the China Airlines' aircraft-procurement issue," Tien said during a dinner with Taiwanese reporters in London.
The UK has a 20 percent stake in Airbus -- a joint venture between France, Germany, Spain and the UK.
"After I told British officials that the issue was mainly a French one, they stopped pursuing it," Tien said, adding that Britons are usually considerate and know when to stop their questioning to avoid embarrassing their friends or guests.
Despite the absence of formal diplomatic ties, Tien said communications between Taiwan's representative office in London and the British government have been smooth.
Tien, a former minister of foreign affairs, said he has made extensive contacts in various social circles since assuming office three months ago. In addition to meeting with British government officials, Tien has also made courtesy calls on parliamentarians, leaders of major political parties, think-tank academics as well as editors-in-chief of major news organizations.
Tien said he has discovered through those meetings that some internationally renowned news media in the UK, such as The Economist, are very supportive of democratic Taiwan.
Under Tien's guidance, Taiwan's representative office helped several British research institutes and think tanks organize a series of seminars in June with Taiwanese academics and experts.
Tien said the representative office will organize a large symposium on Taiwan Strait issues with academics from the two countries after a summer vacation.
LOUD AND PROUD Taiwan might have taken a drubbing against Australia and Japan, but you might not know it from the enthusiasm and numbers of the fans Taiwan might not be expected to win the World Baseball Classic (WBC) but their fans are making their presence felt in Tokyo, with tens of thousands decked out in the team’s blue, blowing horns and singing songs. Taiwanese fans have packed out the Tokyo Dome for all three of their games so far and even threatened to drown out home team supporters when their team played Japan on Friday. They blew trumpets, chanted for their favorite players and had their own cheerleading squad who dance on a stage during the game. The team struggled to match that exuberance on the field, with
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Taiwanese paleontologists have discovered fossil evidence that pythons up to 4m long inhabited Taiwan during the Pleistocene epoch, reporting their findings in the international scientific journal Historical Biology. National Taiwan University (NTU) Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology associate professor Tsai Cheng-hsiu (蔡政修) led the team that discovered the largest snake fossil ever found in Taiwan. A single trunk vertebra was discovered in Tainan at the Chiting Formation, dated to between 800,000 to 400,000 years ago in the Middle Pleistocene, the paper said. The area also produced Taiwan’s first avian fossil, as well as crocodile, mammoth, sabre-toothed cat and rhinoceros fossils, it said. Discoveries
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