Former president Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) was welcomed with flowers on her arrival yesterday in Berlin, where she is scheduled to deliver a keynote speech today at the Berlin Freedom Conference.
Upon arrival at her hotel at about 1:30pm, Tsai was presented with flowers by the hotel manager, and she fielded questions from the media.
Photo: CNA
Asked about the back-to-back visits to Europe by her and Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴), she said: "We will keep working hard."
Before her departure, Tsai wrote on social media that "diplomacy is a relay with no breaks."
She praised Hsiao's recent trip to Brussels, which included a landmark speech at the European Parliament — the first ever by a sitting Taiwanese vice president — calling it a "significant milestone for Taiwan."
Since leaving office, Tsai has continued her efforts to strengthen Taiwan's ties with Europe.
In October last year, she visited the Czech Republic, France and Belgium, and in May, she made visits to Lithuania, Denmark and the UK.
Prior to her current visit, Tsai said that as a trustworthy member of the international community, Taiwan would continue to stand with Europe and other like-minded countries to demonstrate its commitment to freedom and democracy.
The Berlin Freedom Conference, the main event of Berlin Freedom Week, is co-organized by the Berlin city government, the Axel Springer Freedom Foundation and the World Liberty Congress.
The forum gathers global civil society leaders, human rights advocates and experts, who give speeches and engage in panel discussions on how to defend and strengthen freedom and democracy amid the resurgence of authoritarianism.
Confirmed speakers at this year's event include German Bundestag President Julia Klöckner, Berlin Mayor Kai Wegner, Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo López, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk, and Taiwanese Minister Without Portfolio Audrey Tang (唐鳳).
The organizers have highlighted Tsai's participation as one of the major features of the forum.
Taiwanese were praised for their composure after a video filmed by Taiwanese tourists capturing the moment a magnitude 7.5 earthquake struck Japan’s Aomori Prefecture went viral on social media. The video shows a hotel room shaking violently amid Monday’s quake, with objects falling to the ground. Two Taiwanese began filming with their mobile phones, while two others held the sides of a TV to prevent it from falling. When the shaking stopped, the pair calmly took down the TV and laid it flat on a tatami mat, the video shows. The video also captured the group talking about the safety of their companions bathing
US climber Alex Honnold is to attempt to scale Taipei 101 without a rope and harness in a live Netflix special on Jan. 24, the streaming platform announced on Wednesday. Accounting for the time difference, the two-hour broadcast of Honnold’s climb, called Skyscraper Live, is to air on Jan. 23 in the US, Netflix said in a statement. Honnold, 40, was the first person ever to free solo climb the 900m El Capitan rock formation in Yosemite National Park — a feat that was recorded and later made into the 2018 documentary film Free Solo. Netflix previewed Skyscraper Live in October, after videos
Starting on Jan. 1, YouBike riders must have insurance to use the service, and a six-month trial of NT$5 coupons under certain conditions would be implemented to balance bike shortages, a joint statement from transportation departments across Taipei, New Taipei City and Taoyuan announced yesterday. The rental bike system operator said that coupons would be offered to riders to rent bikes from full stations, for riders who take out an electric-assisted bike from a full station, and for riders who return a bike to an empty station. All riders with YouBike accounts are automatically eligible for the program, and each membership account
A classified Pentagon-produced, multiyear assessment — the Overmatch brief — highlighted unreported Chinese capabilities to destroy US military assets and identified US supply chain choke points, painting a disturbing picture of waning US military might, a New York Times editorial published on Monday said. US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s comments in November last year that “we lose every time” in Pentagon-conducted war games pitting the US against China further highlighted the uncertainty about the US’ capability to intervene in the event of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. “It shows the Pentagon’s overreliance on expensive, vulnerable weapons as adversaries field cheap, technologically