From second left, front row, General Association of Chinese Culture secretary-general Lee Hou-ching, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung, Council of Indigenous Peoples Minister Ljaucu Zingrur, and Deputy Representative of the Finland Trade Center in Taiwan Jere Tala, hold placards at a perss conference in Taipei yesterday. The event announced the second Formosa Finland Fest, which is to be held on July 11 at Narinkka Square in Helsinki, Finland.
Photo: Tien Yu-hua, Taipei Times
In a historic first, Taiwanese officials participated in this year’s Riga Strategic Communications Dialogue in Latvia from Wednesday to Friday last week, which debuted a breakout session focused on Taiwan The event organizer, the NATO Strategic Communications Center of Excellence, displayed Taiwan’s national flag and the officials’ formal titles on their Web site. Taiwanese attendees included National Security Council (NSC) Deputy Secretary-General Lin Fei-fan (林飛帆) and deputy head of the Taipei Representative Office in the UK, Chiang Ya-chi (江雅綺). In addition to the session discussing Taiwan titled “Taiwan: Navigating Strategic Communication in a Tense Environment,” the dialogue also included sessions
TOKYO-MANILA DELIMITATION TALKS: Beijing is attempting to use this opportunity to normalize patrols and law enforcement in the waters east of Taiwan, MOFA said China has no law enforcement authority over the waters east of Taiwan, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) said yesterday, accusing China of undermining regional peace and stability. The Chinese Ministry of Transport on Saturday evening announced that it had launched a “special maritime law enforcement operation” in the waters east of Taiwan, dispatching coast guard vessels to engage in illegal enforcement activities, the ministry said. State-run Xinhua news agency said the operation was “a necessary action taken in response to Japan and the Philippines unilaterally announcing the initiation of maritime boundary delimitation negotiations in the waters east of China’s Taiwan island,
Taiwan ranked 42nd in terms of peacefulness among 163 countries, down five places from last year, according to this year’s Global Peace Index. With an overall score of 1.751, Taiwan dropped from 37th last year, the report published by the global Institute for Economics and Peace showed. The overall score measures a country’s level of peacefulness using 23 quantitative and qualitative indicators across three domains — ongoing domestic and international conflict, societal safety and security, and militarization. While Taiwan ranked 42nd worldwide, it was listed in ninth place among the 19 Asian-Pacific countries in the report, after New Zealand, Singapore, Japan, Malaysia,
Taiwan could experience its heaviest rainfall of the week today and tomorrow as a weather front and seasonal southeasterly winds continue to affect the nation, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. Scattered heavy showers are expected across the nation, with thunderstorms possible in western Taiwan and Yilan County in the northeast, CWA forecaster Huang En-hung (黃恩鴻) said. Extremely heavy rainfall, defined as 200mm or more within 24 hours, is forecast for mountainous areas in central and southern Taiwan, the weather agency said. The CWA has also issued a torrential rain advisory for parts of Kaohsiung and Pingtung County, meaning rainfall of at least