Aboriginal villages are to be allowed to apply to harvest materials from traditional lands within national forests under new regulations announced yesterday by the Council of Agriculture.
“Aborigines have extremely varied uses for forest resources, from food to medicine to other uses, as part of traditional customs, but one thing is common — their needs have an immediacy that made the previous, drawn-out application process under the Forestry Act (森林法) impractical for them,” Forestry Bureau Director-General Frank Lin (林華慶) said.
The new rules will in principle allow for villages to harvest plants within their “traditional territories” (傳統領域) for traditional uses, with the exception of five rare plants protected under the Cultural Heritage Preservation Act (文化資產保存法).
It provides for a streamlined application process under which Aboriginal villages would submit a harvesting plan, along with yearly follow-up reports — while exempting individual villagers from submitting applications and providing compensation to the government each time they take something out of the forests, as is currently required.
Villagers would still be required to provide compensation for harvesting any of 12 types of “precious woods,” such as cypress.
The new rules are meant to implement Indigenous Peoples Basic Act (原住民族基本法) guarantees as part of broader Democratic Progressive Party promises to push through implementary laws and regulations for the framework act, which have largely languished since being passed more than 10 years ago.
The Forestry Bureau said that publication of harvesting regulations had been delayed by the failure of the Legislative Yuan to pass legislation governing the definition of “traditional areas” in which tribes would be allowed to collect materials.
Regulations announced yesterday allow village councils to claim their own traditional areas as long as their claims do not conflict with those of other villages.
Villages will be required to demonstrate that the materials have traditional uses, with the Forestry Bureau reserving the right to deny or require amendments to harvesting plans it deems ecologically damaging.
“We’ll conduct inventories of traditional uses in different villages, so there won’t be any new ‘creations,’” Lin said. “Regardless of usage for sacrifices, festivals or medicine, there has to be some kind of definite scope so these rules are not a blank check.”
The rules were intended as a “first step” to help Aborigines move toward becoming “true partners” with the government in forest management, 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
Japanese footwear brand Onitsuka Tiger today issued a public apology and said it has suspended an employee amid allegations that the staff member discriminated against a Vietnamese customer at its Taipei 101 store. Posting on the social media platform Threads yesterday, a user said that an employee at the store said that “those shoes are very expensive” when her friend, who is a migrant worker from Vietnam, asked for assistance. The employee then ignored her until she asked again, to which she replied: "We don't have a size 37." The post had amassed nearly 26,000 likes and 916 comments as of this
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
US President Donald Trump said "it’s up to" Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) what China does on Taiwan, but that he would be "very unhappy" with a change in the "status quo," the New York Times said in an interview published yesterday. Xi "considers it to be a part of China, and that’s up to him what he’s going to be doing," Trump told the newspaper on Wednesday. "But I’ve expressed to him that I would be very unhappy if he did that, and I don’t think he’ll do that," he added. "I hope he doesn’t do that." Trump made the comments in