While the Taipei City Government vowed to track down Taipei Municipal Hoping Hospital's (TMHH) 32 missing health workers, a runaway nurse wrote a letter accusing the government of murder by trying to force her back to the hospital.
The letter, which appeared yesterday in a Chinese-language newspaper, pointed to her human rights and demanded the government grant the hospital's staff "the right to choose domestic quarantine."
The byline of the letter was "an anonymous TMHH nurse who has imposed home quarantine on herself."
"Putting us amongst the patients has encroached on our right to live," the nurse wrote.
Yesterday was the fifth day since TMHH was sealed off because of the hospital's outbreak of mass infections of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS.
Ou Chin-der (歐晉德), a Taipei deputy mayor, said yesterday the city government has deployed civil-affairs officials and the police to trace the absconded hospital staff.
"They will be fined between NT$60,000 and NT$300,000. The police will bring them back to the hospital by force if necessary," Ou announced at a press conference.
However, the letter from the TMHH nurse said that despite government warnings of hefty fines and severe punishment, the threat of SARS is still greater than the penalties.
The letter continued, "The hospital has been phoning me, threatening to lay me off. But I still insisted on quarantining myself at home, because no punishment can exceed the terror cast by the shadow of SARS."
The letter said TMHH is specialized in dealing with infectious diseases. The hospital's facilities are old and its isolation equipment in need of repair, it said.
The nurse said TMHH's condition reminded her Taipei's old asylums that existed decades ago and said the government is treating SARS patients the same way it used to treat the insane.
According to the letter, by the time no more SARS cases are reported from the hospital, most of the health workers forced to stay with SARS patients will have died.
"Those who are not killed by the pressure may probably need counselling for the rest of their lives," the letter said.
The nurse added that the Constitution granted her the right to choose domestic quarantine.
"In such times of life and death, I choose to protect myself and defend the rights God gave me," she wrote.
Nevertheless, Wu Yung-tung (吳運東), president of the Taiwan Medical Association, and himself a doctor, commented on the letter by saying "medical work is team work."
"She should return to the hospital, as the law [the Communicable Disease Prevention Law (傳染病防治法)] stipulates," Wu said.
An official from Taipei's health bureau, who wished to remain anonymous, also said the nurse must return to the hospital, as the law demands.
The Ministry of Education (MOE) is to launch a new program to encourage international students to stay in Taiwan and explore job opportunities here after graduation, Deputy Minister of Education Yeh Ping-cheng (葉丙成) said on Friday. The government would provide full scholarships for international students to further their studies for two years in Taiwan, so those who want to pursue a master’s degree can consider applying for the program, he said. The fields included are science, technology, engineering, mathematics, semiconductors and finance, Yeh added. The program, called “Intense 2+2,” would also assist international students who completed the two years of further studies in
Former president Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) departed for Europe on Friday night, with planned stops in Lithuania and Denmark. Tsai arrived at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport on Friday night, but did not speak to reporters before departing. Tsai wrote on social media later that the purpose of the trip was to reaffirm the commitment of Taiwanese to working with democratic allies to promote regional security and stability, upholding freedom and democracy, and defending their homeland. She also expressed hope that through joint efforts, Taiwan and Europe would continue to be partners building up economic resilience on the global stage. The former president was to first
Taiwan will now have four additional national holidays after the Legislative Yuan passed an amendment today, which also made Labor Day a national holiday for all sectors. The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) used their majority in the Legislative Yuan to pass the amendment to the Act on Implementing Memorial Days and State Holidays (紀念日及節日實施辦法), which the parties jointly proposed, in its third and final reading today. The legislature passed the bill to amend the act, which is currently enforced administratively, raising it to the legal level. The new legislation recognizes Confucius’ birthday on Sept. 28, the
MORE NEEDED: Recall drives against legislators in Miaoli’s two districts and Hsinchu’s second district were still a few thousand signatures short of the second-stage threshold Campaigners aiming to recall Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) legislators yesterday said they expect success in 30 out of 35 districts where drives have passed the second-stage threshold, which would mark a record number of recall votes held at once. Hsinchu County recall campaigners yesterday announced that they reached the second-stage threshold in the recall effort against Legislator Lin Szu-ming (林思銘). A total of 26,414 signatures have been gathered over the past two months, surpassing the 10 percent threshold of 23,287 in Hsinchu County’s second electoral district, chief campaigner Hsieh Ting-ting (謝婷婷) said. “Our target is to gather an additional 1,500 signatures to reach