In view of the PFP's response to the controversy surrounding party Legislator Kao Ming-chien's (高明見) invitation to a WHO-sponsored conference, political observers said that the party has not addressed the core issue but instead shifted the focus in a bid to fudge the situation.
"Instead of addressing the issue of whether Kao was recommended by China, the PFP highlighted the fact that Kao's invitation letter was passed on by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs," Holmes Liao (
Liao was referring to comments by PFP leaders defending Kao, who is attending the conference in Kuala Lumpur.
PFP Chairman James Soong (
Soong said Kao was invited to the conference because the WHO recognized his efforts in fighting the SARS epidemic in Taiwan and that the invitation had originally been sent to the foreign affairs ministry.
Before leaving for the conference, Director of the Center for Disease Control (CDC) Su Ih-jen (
However, Soong challenged Su's statement by showing a document issued by the foreign affairs ministry on June 12 asking Kao, along with others who had received the WHO's invitation to the conference, to attend a meeting before leaving for Malaysia.
"If Kao is not a member of the delegation, why was he invited by the ministry to take part in the meeting?" Soong asked.
Chang Hsien-yao (張顯耀), director of the PFP's Center of Policy Research, claimed the DPP is trying to gain political points from the incident in a bid to generate anti-China sentiment in the run up to next March's presidential election. Chang said the situation has been exacerbated by DPP jealousy that Kao was at the conference, but not at the invitation of Department of Health (DOH) Director-General Chen Chien-jen (陳建仁).
According to Liao, the point that needs to be addressed is whether or not Kao is a willing participant.
"For an invitation letter to have been issued there first of all had to be a recommendation," Liao said. "Therefore, one obvious question that arises is who recommended Kao, because the government clearly stated that it had only recommended four people to take part in the conference."
Kao was not among the four recommended by the government.
"If it is true that Kao is unaware he has fallen under the spell of China and its `one China' propaganda, then he is guilty of naivety." Liao said.
"However, it would be worse if Kao is aware of China's propaganda and yet was still willing to participant in it," Liao said, adding that the public should examine both Kao and the party he represents when deciding if he is guilty of a "quasi-act of treason against Taiwanese."
Moments after the PFP concluded its press conference yesterday, a group of TSU supporters showed up in front of the PFP headquarters protesting Kao's acceptance of China's recommendation to attend the conference.
Yangmingshan National Park authorities yesterday urged visitors to respect public spaces and obey the law after a couple was caught on a camera livestream having sex at the park’s Qingtiangang (擎天崗) earlier in the day. The Shilin Police Precinct in Taipei said it has identified a suspect and his vehicle registration number, and would summon him for questioning. The case would be handled in accordance with public indecency charges, it added. The couple entered the park at about 11pm on Thursday and began fooling around by 1am yesterday, the police said, adding that the two were unaware of the park’s all-day live
A former soldier and an active-duty army officer were yesterday indicted for allegedly selling classified military training materials to a Chinese intelligence operative for a total of NT$79,440. The Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office indicted Chen Tai-yin (陳泰尹) and Lee Chun-ta (李俊達) for contravening the National Security Act (國家安全法) and the Anti-Corruption Act (貪污治罪條例). Chen left the military in September 2013 after serving alongside then-staff sergeant Lee, now an army lieutenant, at the 21st Artillery Command of the army’s Sixth Corps from 2011 to 2013, according to the indictment. Chen met a Chinese intelligence operative identified as “Wang” (王) through a friend in November
Minister of Digital Affairs Lin Yi-ching (林宜敬) yesterday cited regulatory issues and national security concerns as an expert said that Taiwan is among the few Asian regions without Starlink. Lin made the remarks on Facebook after funP Innovation Group chief executive officer Nathan Chiu (邱繼弘) on Friday said Taiwan and four other countries in Asia — China, North Korea, Afghanistan and Syria — have no access to Starlink. Starlink has become available in 166 countries worldwide, including Ukraine, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam, in the six years since it became commercial, he said. While China and North Korea block Starlink, Syria is not
The Grand Hotel Taipei has rejected media reports claiming that the hotel had prevented CBS from broadcasting coverage of the Beijing summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) on its premises. Media reports alleging that the hotel owner, dissatisfied with CBS’s coverage, prohibited the network from broadcasting political content on the hotel premises, are not true, the hotel said in a statement issued last night. The reports were “inconsistent with how the hotel actually handled the matter,” it said. The hotel said it received a refund request from a