Legislators across party lines yesterday passed an amendment to the Immigration Act (入出國及移民法) that grants residency to a large number of Thai and Myanmar students and Tibetans living in exile in Taiwan.
Under the amendment, the government will grant residency to the offspring of former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) soldiers from the border areas of Thailand and Myanmar who entered Taiwan between May 21, 1999, and Dec. 31 last year for studies or technical training with the permission of the Ministry of Education or the Overseas Compatriot Affairs Commission.
Tens of thousands of KMT troops retreated across the Chinese border and stationed themselves in northern Myanmar and Thailand following the defeat of former dictator Chiang Kai-shek's (蔣介石) Nationalist forces by the communists in the Chinese Civil War.
When the push to retake China never took place, many of the soldiers and their families were stranded in the region.
The amendment yesterday also allows the government to grant residency to Tibetans living in exile in Taiwan who entered the nation on Nepalese or Indian passports during the same period of time and whose identity have been confirmed by the Mongolian & Tibetan Affairs Commission.
Besides the amendment, lawmakers also passed a resolution urging the Executive Yuan to prioritize a draft refugee bill in the legislature's spring session.
KMT Legislator Shyu Jong-shyoung (徐中雄) told a press conference that the bill would benefit 986 Tibetans and students from Thailand and Myanmar.
KMT caucus deputy secretary-general Lo Shu-lei (羅淑蕾) referred to the measure as “necessary” for humanitarian reasons.
Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Tien Chiu-chin (田秋堇) said the amendment would “put an end to the suffering of many Tibetans and the offspring of KMT military personnel from Thailand and Myanmar.”
Lee Mai-ping (李美萍), administrative secretary of the Thai-Myanmar Region Chinese Offspring Refugee Service Association, thanked the legislature for passing the bill.
“Finally the government is willing to take us in and a nation is willing to give us recognition,” she said.
Tropical Storm Nari is not a threat to Taiwan, based on its positioning and trajectory, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said yesterday. Nari has strengthened from a tropical depression that was positioned south of Japan, it said. The eye of the storm is about 2,100km east of Taipei, with a north-northeast trajectory moving toward the eastern seaboard of Japan, CWA data showed. Based on its current path, the storm would not affect Taiwan, the agency said.
The Taipei Department of Health’s latest inspection of fresh fruit and vegetables sold in local markets revealed a 25 percent failure rate, with most contraventions involving excessive pesticide residues, while two durians were also found to contain heavy metal cadmium at levels exceeding safety limits. Health Food and Drug Division Director Lin Kuan-chen (林冠蓁) yesterday said the agency routinely conducts inspections of fresh produce sold at traditional markets, supermarkets, hypermarkets, retail outlets and restaurants, testing for pesticide residues and other harmful substances. In its most recent inspection, conducted in May, the department randomly collected 52 samples from various locations, with testing showing
The cosponsors of a new US sanctions package targeting Russia on Thursday briefed European allies and Ukraine on the legislation and said the legislation would also have a deterrent effect on China and curb its ambitions regarding Taiwan. The bill backed by US senators Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal calls for a 500 percent tariff on goods imported from countries that buy Russian oil, gas, uranium and other exports — targeting nations such as China and India, which account for about 70 percent of Russia’s energy trade, the bankroll of much of its war effort. Graham and Blumenthal told The Associated Press
INTEL: China’s ships are mapping strategic ocean floors, including near Guam, which could aid undersea cable targeting and have military applications, a report said China’s oceanographic survey and research ships are collecting data in the Indo-Pacific region — possibly to aid submarine navigation, detect or map undersea cables, and lay naval mines — activities that could have military applications in a conflict with Taiwan or the US, a New York Times report said. The article, titled “China Surveys Seabeds Where Naval Rivals May One Day Clash,” was written by Chris Buckley and published on Thursday. Starboard Maritime Intelligence data revealed that Chinese research ships last year repeatedly scanned the ocean floor east of Taiwan’s maritime border, and about 400km east and west of Guam; “waters that