Minister of Foreign Affairs Timothy Yang (楊進添) yesterday vowed to fully cooperate with local judicial authorities in their investigation into the case involving Jacqueline Liu (劉姍姍), the former director of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Kansas City, Missouri.
US District Judge Greg Kays in Kansas City on Friday ordered the deportation of Liu, who pleaded guilty to human trafficking charges for abusing her two Philippine maids, after the court accepted her plea deal about two months of her arrest.
“We hope she will return as soon as possible, hopefully this week, but I am not sure about the date,” Yang said, adding that the case was handled by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations.
Liu will face investigations conducted by the ministry’s discipline committee, the Control Yuan and prosecutors’ and judicial departments, Yang said.
The 64-year-old was arrested in November last year and charged with fraud in foreign labor contracting in connection with her treatment of two Philippine maids. She admitted to forcing the two women to work day and night for less pay than promised in their contracts.
Control Yuan member Chao Jung-yao (趙榮耀) yesterday said he would subpoena Liu and the ministry’s officials for questioning before he wrapped up investigating the case.
“China is preparing to invade Taiwan,” Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Francois Wu (吳志中) said in an exclusive interview with British media channel Sky News for a special report titled, “Is Taiwan ready for a Chinese invasion?” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said today in a statement. The 25-minute-long special report by Helen Ann-Smith released yesterday saw Sky News travel to Penghu, Taoyuan and Taipei to discuss the possibility of a Chinese invasion and how Taiwan is preparing for an attack. The film observed emergency response drills, interviewed baseball fans at the Taipei Dome on their views of US President
ECONOMIC BENEFITS: The imports from Belize would replace those from Honduras, whose shrimp exports have dropped 67 percent since cutting ties in 2023 Maintaining ties with Taiwan has economic benefits, Ministry of Foreign Affairs officials said yesterday, citing the approval of frozen whiteleg shrimp imports from Belize by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as an example. The FDA on Wednesday approved the tariff-free imports from Belize after the whiteleg shrimp passed the Systematic Inspection of Imported Food, which would continue to boost mutual trade, the ministry said. Taiwan’s annual consumption of whiteleg shrimps stands at 30,000 tonnes, far exceeding domestic production, the ministry said. Taiwan used to fill the gap by importing shrimps from Honduras, but purchases slumped after Tegucigalpa severed diplomatic ties with Taiwan
The Executive Yuan yesterday approved a southwestern extension of the Sanying MRT Line from New Taipei to Bade District (八德) in Taoyuan, with a goal of starting construction by late 2026. The 4.03-kilometer extension, featuring three new stations, will run from the current terminus at Yingtao Fude Station (LB12) in New Taipei City to Dannan Station (LB14), where it will connect with Taoyuan’s Green Line, New Taipei City Metro Corp said in a statement. This extension will follow the completion of core Sanying Line, a 14.29-kilometer medium-capacity system linking Tucheng (土城), Sansia (三峽)
CARGO LOSS: About 50 containers at the stern of the ‘Ever Lunar’ cargo ship went overboard, prompting the temporary closure of the port and disrupting operations Evergreen Marine Corp, Taiwan’s largest container shipper, yesterday said that all crew members aboard the Ever Lunar (長月) were safe after dozens of containers fell overboard off the coast of Peru the previous day. The incident occurred at 9:40am on Friday as the Ever Lunar was anchored and waiting to enter the Port of Callao when it suddenly experienced severe rolling, Evergreen said in a statement. The rolling, which caused the containers to fall, might have been caused by factors including a tsunami triggered by an earthquake in Russia, poor winter sea conditions in South America or a sudden influx of waves,