Taipei Rapid Transit Corp(TRTC) yesterday suspended anti-rust work at 11 stations on the Wenshan-Neihu MRT Line amid complaints about the foul smell and spray falling from the sky, and promised to be better prepared with safety measures.
The TRTC began the anti-rust work at MRT Zhongxiao Fuxing, Zhongshan Junior High School and Nanjing E Road stations on July 28, and was scheduled to continue work at another eight MRT stations until the end of this month.
Showing a video clip of a contract worker standing on a lift spraying the paint on a steel beam underneath the Nanjing E Road MRT Station at about 11pm, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Taipei City Councilor Dai Hsi-chin (戴錫欽) yesterday criticized the lack of warning signs and safety measures at the work site, which exposed passengers and drivers to toxic air and paint.
“The work proceeded when there were still many cars and people on the streets. The worker did not wear a mask and did not have a safety belt while on the lift,” Dai said yesterday at the Taipei City Council.
“The TRTC has a lot of experience in the operation of MRT lines, and I thought the company adopted the highest safety and quality standards,” he said.
Taiwanese can file complaints with the Tourism Administration to report travel agencies if their activities caused termination of a person’s citizenship, Mainland Affairs Council Minister Chiu Chui-cheng (邱垂正) said yesterday, after a podcaster highlighted a case in which a person’s citizenship was canceled for receiving a single-use Chinese passport to enter Russia. The council is aware of incidents in which people who signed up through Chinese travel agencies for tours of Russia were told they could obtain Russian visas and fast-track border clearance, Chiu told reporters on the sidelines of an event in Taipei. However, the travel agencies actually applied
New measures aimed at making Taiwan more attractive to foreign professionals came into effect this month, the National Development Council said yesterday. Among the changes, international students at Taiwanese universities would be able to work in Taiwan without a work permit in the two years after they graduate, explainer materials provided by the council said. In addition, foreign nationals who graduated from one of the world’s top 200 universities within the past five years can also apply for a two-year open work permit. Previously, those graduates would have needed to apply for a work permit using point-based criteria or have a Taiwanese company
The Shilin District Prosecutors’ Office yesterday indicted two Taiwanese and issued a wanted notice for Pete Liu (劉作虎), founder of Shenzhen-based smartphone manufacturer OnePlus Technology Co (萬普拉斯科技), for allegedly contravening the Act Governing Relations Between the People of the Taiwan Area and the Mainland Area (臺灣地區與大陸地區人民關係條例) by poaching 70 engineers in Taiwan. Liu allegedly traveled to Taiwan at the end of 2014 and met with a Taiwanese man surnamed Lin (林) to discuss establishing a mobile software research and development (R&D) team in Taiwan, prosecutors said. Without approval from the government, Lin, following Liu’s instructions, recruited more than 70 software
BACK TO WINTER: A strong continental cold air mass would move south on Tuesday next week, bringing colder temperatures to northern and central Taiwan A tropical depression east of the Philippines could soon be upgraded to be the first tropical storm of this year, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said yesterday, adding that the next cold air mass is forecast to arrive on Monday next week. CWA forecaster Cheng Jie-ren (鄭傑仁) said the first tropical depression of this year is over waters east of the Philippines, about 1,867km southeast of Oluanpi (鵝鑾鼻), and could strengthen into Tropical Storm Nokaen by early today. The system is moving slowly from northwest to north, and is expected to remain east of the Philippines with little chance of affecting Taiwan,