Taiwan and Vietnam are to set up a mechanism to help keep track of the progress of providing compensation for damage suffered by Taiwanese businesses during anti-Chinese riots in Vietnam earlier this year, a Ministry of Economic Affairs official said yesterday.
Department of Investment Services Director-General Lien Yu-ping (連玉蘋) said Taiwan’s representative office in Vietnam and the Vietnamese Ministry of Planning and Investment will monitor the compensation. If problems arise that cannot be solved, a Taiwan-Vietnam task force will continue to coordinate, she said.
Taiwan and Vietnam set up the task force after the May 13 riots, with the two sides holding coordination meetings in June and July. A delegation was in Hanoi for a third coordination session on Wednesday.
Lien, who first met with Taiwanese businesspeople in Binh Duong Province two days before joining the latest meeting, said Vietnam has responded to 24 of 33 requests from the Taiwanese side, including setting up a one-stop window and an interagency task force to handle cases filed by Taiwanese businesses in Vietnam.
The department said 414 Taiwanese businesses were affected by the riots and all except eight have now resumed operations.
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