The Ministry of Justice’s Investigation Bureau said yesterday that 16 Chinese tech companies are being investigated for illegally setting up offices in Taiwan and hiring local staff without authorization.
More than 300 investigators were dispatched from July 15 to Aug. 6 to search 70 locations in Taipei, New Taipei City, Taoyuan and Hsinchu, during which 120 people involved with the companies were summoned for questioning, the bureau said in a news release.
The high-tech industry is the lifeblood of Taiwan’s economy, and talent in related sectors has been a prime target for Chinese companies, it explained.
Photo: Taipei Times
The 16 alleged Chinese firms are accused of faking their business registration, posing either as branch offices of overseas firms with foreign or Taiwanese investment capital, as well as hiring personnel without authorization.
They include Lontium Semiconductor Corp, a fabless design house based in Hefei, China’s Anhui province, Shanghai-based Cista Limited, Novosense Microelectronics Co, Chipone Technology (Beijing) Co and Huntkey Group.
Citing an example, the bureau said Cista, which focuses on integrated circuit chip development, is suspected of using a Hong Kong-based company as a front to disguise itself as foreign company and set up an office in Taiwan, where it recruited semiconductor talent.
Huntkey, one of the largest IT companies in China, is suspected of setting up a branch office in Taiwan under the guise of being based in Hong Kong -- and illegally recruiting PC power supply engineers in Taiwan, it added.
Such actions have seriously undermined the competitiveness of Taiwan’s high-tech industry, the bureau said, noting that it will continue to crackdown on Chinese firms illegally operating in the country.
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
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
ENHANCING DETERRENCE: Stationing the missiles in Kyushu would allow Japan to cover waters near Taiwan and China’s coastal areas without any logistical difficulties Japan is to deploy extended-range anti-ship missiles at a Ground Self-Defense Force base in Kumamoto to bolster its defenses, the Yomiuri Shimbun reported on Saturday. The upgraded Type 12 surface-to-ship missile, with a range of more than 1,000km, would be capable of striking targets in the Taiwan Strait and along China’s coast. Originally limited to a few hundred kilometers, the Type 12 was recently modernized ahead of schedule. Deployment, initially slated for next year, has been accelerated after the upgrade was completed sooner than expected, the newspaper said. Stationing the missiles in Kyushu would allow Japan to cover waters near Taiwan and
The presence of Taiwanese politicians at China’s military parade tomorrow would send the wrong message to Beijing and the international community about Taiwan’s sovereignty and democracy, a national security official said yesterday. China is to hold the parade tomorrow to mark the 80th anniversary of Japan’s surrender in World War II. By bringing together leaders of “anti-West” governments such as Russia, North Korea, Iran and Belarus, the parade aims to project a symbolic image of an alliance that is cohesive and unbending against Western countries, the national security official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) chairwoman Hung Hsiu-chu