The Philippine government yesterday announced it is granting Taiwan passport holders visa-free entry starting in July, a decision Taipei welcomed saying that doing so could further boost two-way exchanges.
The Manila Economic and Cultural Office, the de facto Philippines embassy in Taiwan in the absence of official diplomatic ties, made the announcement in a press statement.
The announcement, titled “Revised Entry Requirements for Taiwan Passport Holders,” says that starting July 1, Taiwan passport holders can enter the Philippines “for tourism purposes without a visa for a non-extendible and non-convertible period of 14 days.”
Photo courtesy of Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Taiwan passport holders planning to visit the Philippines for more than two weeks or other purposes, still need to apply for a visa, it added.
Further details are available at the following website https://www.meco.org.tw/news/detail/1160.
In response, Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) said it welcomed the decision.
In its press statement, MOFA said the visa-free announcement targeting Taiwanese came less than a week after Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) announced on June 13 that Taipei would extend its visa-waiver program for Philippine passport holders for another year starting Aug. 1.
Manila’s decision to reciprocate visa-free entry is expected to further enhance already strong bilateral exchanges in economics, trade, investment and tourism, MOFA added.
The decision was the results of years-long efforts by both governments, it said.
Meanwhile, MOFA reminded Taiwanese travelers to the Philippines to follow local laws and exercise caution while in the Southeast Asian country. In case of an emergency, nationals can call the Taiwan representative office’s emergency hotline at +63-917-819-4597 or ask their family in Taiwan to call MOFA’s 24/7 toll-free emergency hotline at 0800-085-095.
The military has spotted two Chinese warships operating in waters near Penghu County in the Taiwan Strait and sent its own naval and air forces to monitor the vessels, the Ministry of National Defense (MND) said. Beijing sends warships and warplanes into the waters and skies around Taiwan on an almost daily basis, drawing condemnation from Taipei. While the ministry offers daily updates on the locations of Chinese military aircraft, it only rarely gives details of where Chinese warships are operating, generally only when it detects aircraft carriers, as happened last week. A Chinese destroyer and a frigate entered waters to the southwest
A magnitude 6.1 earthquake struck off the coast of Yilan County at 8:39pm tonight, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said, with no immediate reports of damage or injuries. The epicenter was 38.7km east-northeast of Yilan County Hall at a focal depth of 98.3km, the CWA’s Seismological Center said. The quake’s maximum intensity, which gauges the actual physical effect of a seismic event, was a level 4 on Taiwan’s 7-tier intensity scale, the center said. That intensity level was recorded in Yilan County’s Nanao Township (南澳), Hsinchu County’s Guansi Township (關西), Nantou County’s Hehuanshan (合歡山) and Hualien County’s Yanliao (鹽寮). An intensity of 3 was
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s comment last year on Tokyo’s potential reaction to a Taiwan-China conflict has forced Beijing to rewrite its invasion plans, a retired Japanese general said. Takaichi told the Diet on Nov. 7 last year that a Chinese naval blockade or military attack on Taiwan could constitute a “survival-threatening situation” for Japan, potentially allowing Tokyo to exercise its right to collective self-defense. Former Japan Ground Self-Defense Force general Kiyofumi Ogawa said in a recent speech that the remark has been interpreted as meaning Japan could intervene in the early stages of a Taiwan Strait conflict, undermining China’s previous assumptions
Instead of focusing solely on the threat of a full-scale military invasion, the US and its allies must prepare for a potential Chinese “quarantine” of Taiwan enforced through customs inspections, Stanford University Hoover fellow Eyck Freymann said in a Foreign Affairs article published on Wednesday. China could use various “gray zone” tactics in “reconfiguring the regional and ultimately the global economic order without a war,” said Freymann, who is also a nonresident research fellow at the US Naval War College. China might seize control of Taiwan’s links to the outside world by requiring all flights and ships entering or leaving Taiwan