Taipei on Thursday held urban resilience air raid drills, with residents in one of the exercises’ three “key verification zones” reporting little to no difference compared with previous years, despite government pledges of stricter enforcement.
Formerly known as the Wanan exercise, the air raid drills, which concluded yesterday, are now part of the “Urban Resilience Exercise,” which also incorporates the Minan disaster prevention and rescue exercise.
In Taipei, the designated key verification zones — where the government said more stringent measures would be enforced — were Songshan (松山), Zhongshan (中山) and Zhongzheng (中正) districts.
Photo: CNA
Air raid sirens sounded at 1:30pm, signaling the start of the half-hour drill.
In Songshan District, the roads had largely been emptied by 1:30pm. Shortly after the sirens sounded, a bus pulled over to let passengers disembark.
They were directed by police officers to enter the MRT Songshan Station nearby, where people casually stood or sat leaning against walls without adopting a low posture or covering their eyes and ears — actions recommended by the government during an air raid.
A nearby convenience store temporarily turned off its automatic door and lights, and a clerk physically pushed open the door to let pedestrians who were unable to find shelter in.
Asked whether the store had planned a nearby basement or air raid shelter to which they would guide shoppers, per the instructions of the All-out Defense Mobilization Agency, which oversees the drills, the clerk said it had not.
“We did not receive any instructions,” she said before the drill.
She reported only a “slight” change this year.
“In the past, we didn’t turn off the lights, and we continued checking customers out [during the drill],” she said.
Similarly, an accountant at a nearby grocery store sounded perplexed when asked whether they had directed shoppers to a nearby shelter.
“We just told them there will be a drill, and they would either have to stay inside for half an hour or find somewhere else to be,” she said.
The stores stopping short of guiding shoppers to shelters contradicted a remark by Chu Sen-tsuen (朱森村), head of the agency’s Manpower Mobilization Division, who said after a July 1 Ministry of National Defense news conference that “for the first time” in the history of the annual air raid, retail venues must assist shoppers to move to a nearby air raid shelter or basement during the drill.
Asked about the level of compliance in the capital, a source involved in the drills said that “the government’s recommended rules for taking shelter in an air raid are ‘better to be underground than on the surface; better be indoors than outdoors.’”
“That is why we would rather people [in stores] not seek other shelters after the sirens have gone off,” the source said.
Asked if China’s saber-rattling in recent years had added a sense of realism to the drill or changed how she perceives it, a student at MRT Songshan Station said it had not.
“I think it is unlikely [that China will attack],” said Chen, a student at the Songshan High School of Agriculture and Industry.
However, Chen criticized what she described as the government’s lack of commitment to the air raid drill.
“If you want to conduct a drill, do it properly,” she said.
“For example, if the southern regions cannot conduct the drill due to damage from a natural disaster, postpone it so that everyone can participate instead of canceling it altogether,” she said.
She also questioned the need for designating “key verification zones” instead of placing the entire country on the same alert level during the drill.
Taipei Mayor Chiang Wan-an (蔣萬安) and Minister Without Portfolio Chi Lien-cheng (季連成) inspected the basement of the Songshan District Administration Center during the drill, where 178 staff members were taking shelter and adopting personal safety measures.
Several foreign dignitaries were also present to observe the exercise, including Saint Kitts and Nevis Ambassador to Taiwan Donya Francis, American Institute in Taiwan Director Raymond Greene and European Economic and Trade Office in Taiwan head Lutz Gullner.
Three batches of banana sauce imported from the Philippines were intercepted at the border after they were found to contain the banned industrial dye Orange G, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said yesterday. From today through Sept. 2 next year, all seasoning sauces from the Philippines are to be subject to the FDA’s strictest border inspection, meaning 100 percent testing for illegal dyes before entry is allowed, it said in a statement. Orange G is an industrial coloring agent that is not permitted for food use in Taiwan or internationally, said Cheng Wei-chih (鄭維智), head of the FDA’s Northern Center for
LOOKING NORTH: The base would enhance the military’s awareness of activities in the Bashi Channel, which China Coast Guard ships have been frequenting, an expert said The Philippine Navy on Thursday last week inaugurated a forward operating base in the country’s northern most province of Batanes, which at 185km from Taiwan would be strategically important in a military conflict in the Taiwan Strait. The Philippine Daily Inquirer quoted Northern Luzon Command Commander Lieutenant General Fernyl Buca as saying that the base in Mahatao would bolster the country’s northern defenses and response capabilities. The base is also a response to the “irregular presence this month of armed” of China Coast Guard vessels frequenting the Bashi Channel in the Luzon Strait just south of Taiwan, the paper reported, citing a
UNDER PRESSURE: The report cited numerous events that have happened this year to show increased coercion from China, such as military drills and legal threats The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) aims to reinforce its “one China” principle and the idea that Taiwan belongs to the People’s Republic of China by hosting celebratory events this year for the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, the “retrocession” of Taiwan and the establishment of the UN, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said in its latest report to the Legislative Yuan. Taking advantage of the significant anniversaries, Chinese officials are attempting to assert China’s sovereignty over Taiwan through interviews with international news media and cross-strait exchange events, the report said. Beijing intends to reinforce its “one China” principle
A total lunar eclipse, an astronomical event often referred to as a “blood moon,” would be visible to sky watchers in Taiwan starting just before midnight on Sunday night, the Taipei Astronomical Museum said. The phenomenon is also called “blood moon” due to the reddish-orange hue it takes on as the Earth passes directly between the sun and the moon, completely blocking direct sunlight from reaching the lunar surface. The only light is refracted by the Earth’s atmosphere, and its red wavelengths are bent toward the moon, illuminating it in a dramatic crimson light. Describing the event as the most important astronomical phenomenon