The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday welcomed a delegation of more than 70 members of Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) Youth Division, led by Japanese Representatives Yasutaka Nakasone, for a four-day visit to Taiwan.
The group, headed by Nakasone in his capacity as division director, includes Representatives Shoujiro Hiranuma and Ryusho Kato, House of Councillors member Masayuki Kamiya and other division members, the ministry said.
During their stay, which runs through Wednesday, the delegation is scheduled to meet with senior officials, including President William Lai (賴清德), Legislative Speaker Han Kuo-yu (韓國瑜), Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) and Taipei Mayor Chiang Wan-an (蔣萬安).
Photo courtesy of the Presidential Office
They are also expected to meet with members of the Third Wednesday Association-Young Entrepreneur Group and other political and business leaders.
The LDP Youth Division has long played a central role in advancing the party’s exchanges with Taiwan, routinely dispatching delegations to engage with different sectors, the ministry said.
Past directors of the division have included senior political figures such as former Japanese prime ministers Fumio Kishida, Shinzo Abe and Taro Aso.
Nakasone is the grandson of former Japanese prime minister Yasuhiro Nakasone.
When a delegation met with Lai in August last year, Lai had said that the friendship between the LDP and Taiwan goes back more than half a century, and the LDP Youth Division has played a key role in the relationship.
Lai also said that the strength of Taiwan-Japan friendship is most evident in difficult times, adding that both have a shared destiny — situated on the first island chain and together facing the challenge of rising authoritarianism.
He expressed hope that the two sides can further deepen cooperation and build an even closer partnership.
The LDP Youth Division has sent delegations to Taiwan annually over the past few years, meeting with Lai in May and August last year, and with former president Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) in April last year, August 2023 and May 2022.
The delegation’s visit to Taiwan shows that Japan highly values the close ties and friendship between Japan and Taiwan, MOFA said.
Thee trip would strengthen parliamentary diplomacy, expand substantive collaborative relationships across various fields and foster deeper exchanges and understanding between young leaders of both sides, the ministry added.
Eight Chinese naval vessels and 24 military aircraft were detected crossing the median line of the Taiwan Strait between 6am yesterday and 6am today, the Ministry of National Defense said this morning. The aircraft entered Taiwan’s northern, central, southwestern and eastern air defense identification zones, the ministry said. The armed forces responded with mission aircraft, naval vessels and shore-based missile systems to closely monitor the situation, it added. Eight naval vessels, one official ship and 36 aircraft sorties were spotted in total, the ministry said.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) today said that if South Korea does not reply appropriately to its request to correct Taiwan’s name on its e-Arrival card system before March 31, it would take corresponding measures to alter how South Korea is labeled on the online Taiwan Arrival Card system. South Korea’s e-Arrival card system lists Taiwan as “China (Taiwan)” in the “point of departure” and “next destination” fields. The ministry said that it changed the nationality for South Koreans on Taiwan’s Alien Resident Certificates from “Korea” to “South Korea” on March 1, in a gesture of goodwill and based on the
Taiwanese officials were shown the first of 66 F-16V fighter jets purchased by Taiwan from the United States, the Ministry of National Defense said yesterday, adding the aircraft has completed an initial flight test and is expected to be delivered later this year. A delegation led by Deputy Minister of National Defense Hsu Szu-chien (徐斯儉) visited Lockheed Martin’s F-16 C/D Block 70 (also known as F-16V) assembly line in South Carolina on March 16 to view the aircraft. The jet will undergo a final acceptance flight in the US before being delivered to Taiwan, the
The New Taipei Metro's Sanyin Line and the eastern extension of the Taipei Metro's Tamsui-Xinyi Line (Red Line) are scheduled to begin operations in June, the National Development Council said today. The Red Line, which terminates at Xiangshan Station, would be connected by the 1.4km extension to a new eastern terminal, Guangci/Fengtian Temple Station, while the Sanyin Line would link New Taipei City's Tucheng and Yingge stations via Sanxia District (三峽). The council gave the updates at a council meeting reviewing progress on public construction projects for this year. Taiwan's annual public infrastructure budget would remain at NT$800 billion (US$25.08 billion), with NT$97.3