Sexual harassment case mishandled, female doctors sayBy Lee I-chia / Staff reporterThe Taipei Doctors’ Union and two former doctors at New Taipei City’s Shuang Ho Hospital yesterday accused the hospital of downplaying accusations of sexual harassment and imposing a light penalty on a male executive. Taipei Doctors’ Union president Chen Liang-fu, second right, holds a poster at a news conference in Taipei yesterday. Photo courtesy of the Taipei Doctors’ UnionWhen a female worker was in a recovery room after a miscarriage, the director allegedly rubbed her breasts with his hands, she said. She said the victims had filed sexual harassment complaints with the hospital, but the administration failed to protect the victims, and the grievance committee failed to avoid conflicts of interest. The union said the director is still an official of a doctor’s association, holding academic resources and authority, raising concerns that other young female doctors might be at risk.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
EDITORIAL: Truth behind tax revenue surplusTaiwan has had a tax revenue surplus every year since 2021, with last year’s figure reaching NT$528.3 billion (US$16.8 billion), which brought the cumulative surpluses of the past four years to NT$1.87 trillion, Ministry of Finance data showed. It is natural for some people to have such questions, as they mistakenly believe that tax revenue surplus means the government has extra income, but that is not the case. Tax revenue surplus simply means that the tax collected by the government exceeds the amount it projected. On the other hand, this year’s tax revenue shortfall might signal a correction in the structural inaccuracy of the government’s tax revenue forecasting model. The result was that actual tax revenue consistently exceeded the expected amount, creating a structural, excess tax revenue trend that continued year after year.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Watchdog group chooses annual word for legislatureBy Hsieh Chun-lin and Jason Pan / Staff reportersThe word hui (毀, “destroy”) was chosen as this year’s word representing the legislature, Citizen Congress Watch (CCW) said yesterday. Members of the Citizen Congress Watch hold a press conference outside the Legislative Yuan in Taipei yesterday with a poster showing the character “destroy” as the word representing this year’s legislature. “People are worried about infiltration of enemy state agents and proxies into the legislature to endanger national security and undermine Taiwanese sovereignty,” Hsieh said. The legislative offices are full of leaks, with a number of legislative aides caught stealing and passing secrets to China,” he added. All these actions conspire to open the doors for the enemy state Chinese forces to operate more easily in Taiwan,” Hsieh added.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Chinese exercise is part of two-pronged approachCARROT AND STICK: The exercise likely complements a strategy operating against Taiwan on several different levels, enticing and intimidating by turnsStaff writer, with CNAThe so-called “justice” behind the military exercise launched by China yesterday around Taiwan is absurd, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said yesterday. Photo: Taipei Times file photodimensional deterrence outside the island chain,” a senior PLA officer said in a statement yesterday. The MAC yesterday said the actions of the Chinese Communist Party contradict its proclaimed “global peace initiative,” highlighting its hegemonic nature and intent to change the “status quo.”The MAC said that the military exercises were launched one day after the Taipei-Shanghai Twin-City Forum, indicating that China was engaging in “a carefully orchestrated two-pronged strategy.”“On one hand, it talks about getting closer, while on the other it resorts to military intimidation,” the MAC said. Beijing is a “troublemaker” and a threat to peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait, it said, adding the PLA’s show of force was unacceptable to the people of Taiwan and to the international community. The Twin-City Forum is an annual event that has been held since 2010 to promote city-to-city exchanges between Taipei and Shanghai, with the two cities alternating as host.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Taiwan celebrates Christmas, kind of, once again after 25 yearsTaiwan is getting a day off on Christmas for the first time in 25 years. The change comes after opposition parties passed a law earlier this year to add or restore five public holidays, including Constitution Day, which falls on today, Dec. 25. The day marks the 1947 adoption of the constitution of the Republic of China, as the government in Taipei is formally known. Back then the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) governed China from Nanjing. When the KMT, now an opposition party in Taiwan, passed the legislation on holidays, it said that they would help “commemorate the history of national development.” That
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Mercury to plunge on New Year’s Day with arrival of cold air massStaff writer, with CNAA strong continental cold air mass will move into Taiwan on New Year’s Day Thursday, sending temperatures plummeting to lows of around 10°C in some areas in the following days, according to the Central Weather Administration (CWA). Beginning tomorrow, the approaching system will bring a chance of rain to northern and eastern Taiwan, with high temperatures ranging from 19-22°C in the north, said CWA forecaster Cheng Chieh-jen (鄭傑仁). Central and southern Taiwan can expect clear to cloudy conditions tomorrow, with highs of 24-27°C, he said. The cold snap is expected to last through the weekend, with the coldest temperatures forecast for Saturday, when lows will drop to 9-12°C in northern and central Taiwan and 13-15°C in the south. High temperatures Saturday will hover around 14-15°C the north and Yilan, 16-19°C in central Taiwan, and 21°C in the south, Cheng said.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Kyiv offered 15 years of security pledge: Zelenskiy‘SOLID’ GUARANTEES: Any deal to end Europe’s worst conflict since World War II ‘must be signed by Ukraine, Russia, the US and Europe,’ Zelenskiy saidAFP, KYIVThe US has offered Ukraine “solid” security guarantees for 15 years with a possibility of an extension, but Kyiv is seeking a longer period, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said yesterday after meeting US President Donald Trump. The issue of territory and the future of Ukraine’s Moscow-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant were the remaining unresolved parts of a plan to end the war, Zelenskiy said. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy smiles during a joint news conference with US President Donald Trump, not pictured, at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, on Sunday. Kyiv was hoping for a meeting with European and US officials in Ukraine in the “coming days” to work on documents to end the conflict, Zelenskiy said. Any deal to end Europe’s worst conflict since World War II “must be signed by Ukraine, Russia, the US and Europe,” he said.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Transport ministry eyes reforms after knife attackBy Shelley Shan / Staff reporterThe Ministry of Transportation and Communications yesterday pledged to set new criteria to prevent disasters in major transport hubs, following a knife attack at Taipei Main Station on Dec. 19. Three Special Police Corps officers stand with other police officers and a police dog at a news conference in Taipei yesterday. The National Police Agency should consider merging the operations of 110 and 119 hotlines to better respond to incidents at the station, Tsai said. “People do not need to know the division of labor among law enforcement agencies, but they should know one number they can call whenever they see an abnormality at the railway station,” Tsai said. We are reviewing whether we should increase the number of emergency buttons inside Taipei Main Station.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Flights and shipping affected by Chinese drillsBy Shelley Shan / Staff ReporterTrips for more than 100,000 international and domestic air travelers could be disrupted as China launches a military exercise around Taiwan today, Taiwan’s Civil Aviation Administration (CAA) said yesterday. A notice issued by the Chinese Civil Aviation Administration showed there would be seven temporary zones around the Taiwan Strait which would be used for live-fire exercises, lasting from 8am to 6pm today. Photo: Wu Liang-yi, Taipei TimesTaipei FIR has 14 international air routes and four domestic air routes, the CAA said. Approximately 857 international flights would be affected by the drill today, including 296 outbound flights, 265 inbound flights and 296 transit flights, the CAA data showed. More than 100,000 international air travelers are estimated to be affected by the military exercise, based on the data.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Ministry unveils new targets to reduce plasticSTEP-BY-STEP: First, the environment ministry would urge companies to adopt green designs for packaging before enacting new restrictions, it saidBy Wu Po-hsuan and Esme Yeh / Staff reporter, with staff writerThe Ministry of Environment yesterday announced new plastic reduction targets of 5 percent by 2030 and 10 percent by 2035 from last year, with plastic wrapping for e-commerce and retail products to be restricted. Minister of Environment Peng Chi-ming (彭?明) said the ministry has been promoting plastic reduction and restriction since 2018, but most targets went unmet over the past seven years, with disposable beverage cups being the only item included in a full-scale plastic ban. Given that previous regulations have reached a bottleneck, the ministry updated its targets for the next decade, he said. In addition to banning or restricting plastic use, the ministry would also enhance “user pays” mechanisms, introduce economic incentives, expand regulation scale and expand plastic reduction education, he said. Plastic wrapping for retail and e-commerce goods would be targets for reduction, as well as plastic bags, straws, beverage cups and disposable utensils, Resource Circulation Administration Director-General Lai Ying-ying (賴瑩瑩) said.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
DPP urges support for budget plansBy Hsieh Chun-lin / Staff reporter, with CNADemocratic Progressive Party (DPP) caucus yesterday urged opposition parties not to obstruct military procurement and national defense budgets at the legislative Procedure Committee meeting today, given China’s latest exercise around Taiwan. The central government’s fiscal budget proposal for next year has yet to be submitted for legislative committee review. Democratic Progressive Party caucus chief executive Chung Chia-pin, second left, speaks at a press conference in Taipei yesterday. DPP caucus chief executive Chung Chia-pin (鍾佳濱) yesterday said that investing in national defense is investing inself-defense and peace. Taiwan People’s Party Chairman Huang Kuo-chang, right, speaks at a press conference in Taipei yesterday.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Models to keep multilateralism alive exist in the wildMultilateral cooperation can still exist, if organizations focus on a few thingsBy Jose Manuel Barroso / GENEVAFew would deny that there has been a shift away from multilateral cooperation in recent years. My confidence stems from my experience as the chair of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. Gavi exists to save lives and protect health by expanding access to vaccines in lower-income countries. In each case, historic changes needed a catalyst, which is exactly the role that Gavi has played in promoting public health. Jose Manuel Barroso, former president of the European Commission and former prime minister of Portugal, is chair of the board of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
TAIEX up 0.89 percent as TSMC hits record highStaff writer, with CNATaiwanese shares closed higher yesterday as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) hit a record high on reports that the contract chipmaker would raise prices for its advanced chips, even as China staged military exercises near the nation. The TAIEX ended up 254.87 points, or 0.89 percent, at 28,810.89. Turnover on the local main board totaled NT$439.098 billion (US$13.96 billion), Taiwan Stock Exchange data showed. In South Korea, the KOSPI jumped 2.2 percent to 4,220.56, less than 2 points away from its record high early last month, but on pace for its best year since 1999. Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was 3.27 percent higher at US$12,560 per tonne, having set a record high of US$12,960 earlier yesterday.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
Taiwan slams China’s ‘provocation’‘IRRESPONSIBLE’: Beijing’s constant disruption of the ‘status quo’ in the Taiwan Strait has damaged peace, stability and security in the Indo-Pacific region, MOFA saidStaff writer, with agenciesThe Presidential Office yesterday condemned China’s launch of another military drill around Taiwan, saying such actions are a “unilateral provocation” that destabilizes regional peace and stability. An air defense missile system is deployed next to a Taiwan Air Force Mirage 2000 jet in a hangar at an airbase in Hsinchu yesterday. Ministry of National Defense spokesman Major General Sun Li-fang speaks at a news conference in Taipei yesterday. Photo: CNAThe Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) also condemned China’s military drills and called on Beijing to cease its unprovoked military provocative actions immediately. The exercises began 11 days after the US announced US$11.1 billion in arms sales to Taiwan, the largest-ever weapons package for the nation.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 16:45 UTC
‘Culture Points’ age eligibility to expand next yearStaff writer, with CNAResidents aged 13 to 22 would be eligible to claim NT$1,200 (US$38.27) in cash handouts, known as Culture Points, from Thursday to spend on cultural activities or at related venues, the Ministry of Culture said today. Photo: CNAIt was expanded last year to include those aged 16 to 17, and this year began offering NT$600 in Culture Points to children aged 13 to 15 on a trial basis. At a news conference, Minister of Culture Li Yuan (李遠) said the program would be expanded once again next year by making all Taiwanese residents aged 13 to 22 eligible for NT$1,200 in Culture Points. This year, foreign nationals with alien permanent resident certificates or spouse-based resident visas who met the age requirements were eligible to claim Culture Points. The ministry said that more than 80 percent of those eligible had used their 2025 Culture Points as of today, spending nearly NT$1.5 billion.
Source:Taipei Times
December 29, 2025 10:33 UTC