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Taiwan vs. China, the One China Policy | China Uncensored
The One China Policy is the rather tenuous agreement between Taiwan, the Republic of China, and Mainland China, the People's Republic of China, that there is only one China. The problem is, they both claim to be that one China. That's made China's position on the UN Security Council a bit awkward. Taiwan used to be the China on the Security Council but in the 70's, after the Cold War cooled a bit,
-
Videographic: What does China want?
An animated infographic depicting China’s territorial disputes. Is China trying to expand its territory?
ONE reason China’s spectacular rise sometimes alarms its neighbours is that it is not a status quo power. From its inland, western borders to its eastern and southern seaboard, it claims territory it does not control.
In the west, China’s border dispute with India is more than a minor cartogr
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TAIWAN ISSUE and SINO US RELATIONS
A video by Hindu Judaic.
-
Why China And Taiwan Hate Each Other
China & Hong Kong: http://testu.be/1rMbVRb
China & Tibet: http://testu.be/1IwXk3N
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Since 1949, both Taiwan's government and Mainland China's government, have claimed validity as the legitimate, and only, "China". So, what's going on? Which is the "real" China, and why do the two countries hate each other?
Learn More:
Why Is the 1992 Consensus So Important to
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20151224 TAIWAN BBOY with Issue
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Hu Jintao Warns U.S. Stay Out of China's Tibet and Taiwan Issues
While some media in Washington, D.C., were slamming Chinese leader Hu Jintao and his regime for human rights abuses, back in the Mainland state media was tot...
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Taiwan issue
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Taiwan to meet with Japan early next year on issue of wartime sexual slavery
대만 "내년초 日과 위안부교섭"…필리핀ㆍ네덜란드도 협상촉구
The Japanese government has agreed to hold talks with Taiwan early next year over the issue of Japan′s wartime sex slavery atrocities against Taiwanese women.
This comes after the Taiwanese government called on the Japanese government to apologise and offer compensation, similar to the landmark agreement reached by Korea and Japan on Monday.
Kwon Jang-Ho files thi
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CHINA: TAIWAN ISSUE - SANDY BERGER URGES PEACEFUL SOLUTION
Natural Sound
Urging China to have patience, a senior aide to President Bill Clinton has reportedly told Chinese leaders that tensions could force Washington to sell the Taiwanese military more weapons.
A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said National Security Adviser Sandy Berger also "reaffirmed in very clear terms" that Washington still acknowledges Chi
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USA: STATE DEPARTMENT SPOKESMAN RUBIN ON CHINA-TAIWAN ISSUE
English/Nat
Reports in a Taiwanese newspaper on Tuesday morning suggest Taipei will tell China that President Lee Teng-hui's statehood declaration made on July 9 was intended to prepare Taiwan for eventual reunification with the mainland and not a step toward independence.
The apparent bid to pacify an outraged Beijing follows China's warning to the United States on Sunday that it would con
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Taiwan issue is democracy - 3
New Taiwan in 1990
USA supports Taiwan democracy
Taiwan issue is democracy
US' policy Taiwan democracy
Taiwan & PRC tie in language but not democracy
What end do we see of Taiwan?
Time for Xi Jingping to follow Chiang Ching-Kuo's path
Dan Blumenthal
Director of Asian Studies
American Enterprise Institute (AEI)
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Time for Xi Jinping to Follow
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Taiwan: The Wedge Issue in the U.S.-China Relationship by Dr. John Copper
On November 13, 2013, Dr. John Copper, Professor of International Studies at Rhodes College, discusses the role of Taiwan in the relationship between China a...
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在台越南人看越南暴動 Thưa quý vị, gần đây do Trung Quốc ngang nhiên lắp đặt giàn khoan trong khu vực đặc quyền kinh tế biển (EEZ) của Việt Nam, làm cho sự xung đột chủ...
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Chinese Premier discusses Taiwan issue (Wen Jiabao meets the press Pt 2)
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GWO Taiwan News
越南政府95號議定書通緝逃逸越勞!
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GWO là t
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Taiwan vs. China, the One China Policy | China Uncensored
The One China Policy is the rather tenuous agreement between Taiwan, the Republic of China, and Mainland China, the People's Republic of China, that there is on...
The One China Policy is the rather tenuous agreement between Taiwan, the Republic of China, and Mainland China, the People's Republic of China, that there is only one China. The problem is, they both claim to be that one China. That's made China's position on the UN Security Council a bit awkward. Taiwan used to be the China on the Security Council but in the 70's, after the Cold War cooled a bit, China took the place as China. Confused? Yeah, me too. Just watch the episode and you'll figure it out.
Subscribe for more China Uncensored:
http://www.youtube.com/ntdchinauncensored
Make sure to share with your friends!
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China's Red Army Sings Michael Jackson?!
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China's Totally Cool "Red Games"
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America is Up for Sale!
http://e.ntd.tv/XGTRZb
China Prepares for War
http://e.ntd.tv/ZN6oqV
Uncensored Radio Signal to China Faces Destruction
http://e.ntd.tv/13iWZZP
Chinese Admiral Discovers Weak Point of US Military
http://e.ntd.tv/Zx9Nth
Uncomfortable Truth Behind Japan's Comfort Women
http://e.ntd.tv/19nvSmL
Bo Xilai Charged with Corruption on Road to Trial
http://e.ntd.tv/13juEn6
Are Plastinated Bodies Murdered Chinese Prisoners of Conscience?
http://e.ntd.tv/13Mnvir
wn.com/Taiwan Vs. China, The One China Policy | China Uncensored
The One China Policy is the rather tenuous agreement between Taiwan, the Republic of China, and Mainland China, the People's Republic of China, that there is only one China. The problem is, they both claim to be that one China. That's made China's position on the UN Security Council a bit awkward. Taiwan used to be the China on the Security Council but in the 70's, after the Cold War cooled a bit, China took the place as China. Confused? Yeah, me too. Just watch the episode and you'll figure it out.
Subscribe for more China Uncensored:
http://www.youtube.com/ntdchinauncensored
Make sure to share with your friends!
______________________________
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChinaUncensored
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ChinaUncensored
______________________________
MOBILE LINKS!
China's Red Army Sings Michael Jackson?!
http://e.ntd.tv/ZMMC38
China's Totally Cool "Red Games"
http://e.ntd.tv/12RmJgO
America is Up for Sale!
http://e.ntd.tv/XGTRZb
China Prepares for War
http://e.ntd.tv/ZN6oqV
Uncensored Radio Signal to China Faces Destruction
http://e.ntd.tv/13iWZZP
Chinese Admiral Discovers Weak Point of US Military
http://e.ntd.tv/Zx9Nth
Uncomfortable Truth Behind Japan's Comfort Women
http://e.ntd.tv/19nvSmL
Bo Xilai Charged with Corruption on Road to Trial
http://e.ntd.tv/13juEn6
Are Plastinated Bodies Murdered Chinese Prisoners of Conscience?
http://e.ntd.tv/13Mnvir
- published: 26 Jul 2013
- views: 359448
Videographic: What does China want?
An animated infographic depicting China’s territorial disputes. Is China trying to expand its territory?
ONE reason China’s spectacular rise sometimes alarms i...
An animated infographic depicting China’s territorial disputes. Is China trying to expand its territory?
ONE reason China’s spectacular rise sometimes alarms its neighbours is that it is not a status quo power. From its inland, western borders to its eastern and southern seaboard, it claims territory it does not control.
In the west, China’s border dispute with India is more than a minor cartographic tiff. China claims an area of India that is three times the size of Switzerland, the state of Arunachal Pradesh.
Further west, China occupies Indian claimed territory next to Ladakh in Kashmir, an area called the Aksai Chin. China humiliated India in a brief, bloody war over the dispute in 1962. Since 1988, the two countries have put the dispute on the backburner and got on with developing commercial ties, despite occasional flare-ups.
More immediately dangerous is the stand-off between China and Japan over disputed islands in the East China Sea, known as the Senkakus in Japan and Diaoyu in Chinese.
Japan says they have always been its territory and admits no dispute, claiming also that China only started expressing an interest when it began to seem the area might be rich in oil and gas.
A new and much more dangerous phase of the dispute began in 2012 after Japan’s government nationalised three of the islands by buying them from their private owner.
China accused Japan of breaking an understanding not to change the islands’ status. Ever since, it has been challenging not just Japan’s claim to sovereignty over the islands, but its claim to control them, sending Chinese ships and planes to patrol them.
Raising the stakes is Japan’s alliance with America, which says that though it takes no position on who owns the islands, they are covered by its defence treaty with Japan, since it administers them.
Especially provocative to America and Japan was China’s unilateral announcement in November 2013 of an Air-defence Identification Zone, covering the islands.
The worry is less that big powers will deliberately go to war over these desolate little rocks, but that an accidental collision at sea or in the air might escalate unforeseeably.
Similar fears cloud disputes in the South China Sea, where the maritime claims in South-East Asia are even more complex, and, again, competition is made more intense by speculation about vast potential wealth in hydrocarbon resources.
Vietnam was incensed in May 2014 when China moved a massive oil-rig to drill for two months in what it claimed as its waters.
This was near the Paracel Islands, controlled by China since it evicted the former South Vietnamese from them in 1974.
To the south, China and Vietnam also claim the Spratly archipelago, as does Taiwan, whose claim in the sea mirrors China’s. But the Philippines also has a substantial claim. Malaysia and even tiny Brunei also have an interest.
But it is with Vietnam and the Philippines that China’s disputes are most active. The Philippines accuses China of salami-slicing tactics, stealthily expanding its presence in disputed waters. In 1995 it evicted the Philippines from Mischief Reef, and in 2012 from Scarborough Shoal.
This year it has tried to stop the Philippines from resupplying a small garrison it maintains on the Second Thomas Shoal, and appears to be building an airstrip on the Johnson South Reef.
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea—UNCLOS—is one forum for tackling these disputes. But UNCLOS cannot rule over territorial disputes, just over the waters habitable islands are entitled to.
And China and Taiwan point to a map published in the 1940s, showing a big U-shaped nine-dashed line around the edge of the sea. That, they say, is historically all China’s. This has no basis in international law, and the Philippines, to China’s fury, is challenging it at an UNCLOS tribunal.
In fact China often fails to clarify whether its claims are based on the nine-dashed line, or on claims to islands, rocks and shoals.
That lack of clarity alarms not just its neighbours and rival claimants, but the United States, which says it has its own national interest in the freedom of navigation in a sea through which a huge chunk of global trade passes
Also alarming is that if these arguments over tiny specks in the sea become so unmanageable, what hope is there for resolving the really big issues? And the biggest of all is the status of Taiwan, still seen by China as part of its territory, but in practice independent since 1949.
For now, Taiwan and China have a thriving commercial relationship. But polls suggest that few in Taiwan hanker after unification with the mainland. And China’s rulers still insist that one day they will have to accept just that.
wn.com/Videographic What Does China Want
An animated infographic depicting China’s territorial disputes. Is China trying to expand its territory?
ONE reason China’s spectacular rise sometimes alarms its neighbours is that it is not a status quo power. From its inland, western borders to its eastern and southern seaboard, it claims territory it does not control.
In the west, China’s border dispute with India is more than a minor cartographic tiff. China claims an area of India that is three times the size of Switzerland, the state of Arunachal Pradesh.
Further west, China occupies Indian claimed territory next to Ladakh in Kashmir, an area called the Aksai Chin. China humiliated India in a brief, bloody war over the dispute in 1962. Since 1988, the two countries have put the dispute on the backburner and got on with developing commercial ties, despite occasional flare-ups.
More immediately dangerous is the stand-off between China and Japan over disputed islands in the East China Sea, known as the Senkakus in Japan and Diaoyu in Chinese.
Japan says they have always been its territory and admits no dispute, claiming also that China only started expressing an interest when it began to seem the area might be rich in oil and gas.
A new and much more dangerous phase of the dispute began in 2012 after Japan’s government nationalised three of the islands by buying them from their private owner.
China accused Japan of breaking an understanding not to change the islands’ status. Ever since, it has been challenging not just Japan’s claim to sovereignty over the islands, but its claim to control them, sending Chinese ships and planes to patrol them.
Raising the stakes is Japan’s alliance with America, which says that though it takes no position on who owns the islands, they are covered by its defence treaty with Japan, since it administers them.
Especially provocative to America and Japan was China’s unilateral announcement in November 2013 of an Air-defence Identification Zone, covering the islands.
The worry is less that big powers will deliberately go to war over these desolate little rocks, but that an accidental collision at sea or in the air might escalate unforeseeably.
Similar fears cloud disputes in the South China Sea, where the maritime claims in South-East Asia are even more complex, and, again, competition is made more intense by speculation about vast potential wealth in hydrocarbon resources.
Vietnam was incensed in May 2014 when China moved a massive oil-rig to drill for two months in what it claimed as its waters.
This was near the Paracel Islands, controlled by China since it evicted the former South Vietnamese from them in 1974.
To the south, China and Vietnam also claim the Spratly archipelago, as does Taiwan, whose claim in the sea mirrors China’s. But the Philippines also has a substantial claim. Malaysia and even tiny Brunei also have an interest.
But it is with Vietnam and the Philippines that China’s disputes are most active. The Philippines accuses China of salami-slicing tactics, stealthily expanding its presence in disputed waters. In 1995 it evicted the Philippines from Mischief Reef, and in 2012 from Scarborough Shoal.
This year it has tried to stop the Philippines from resupplying a small garrison it maintains on the Second Thomas Shoal, and appears to be building an airstrip on the Johnson South Reef.
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea—UNCLOS—is one forum for tackling these disputes. But UNCLOS cannot rule over territorial disputes, just over the waters habitable islands are entitled to.
And China and Taiwan point to a map published in the 1940s, showing a big U-shaped nine-dashed line around the edge of the sea. That, they say, is historically all China’s. This has no basis in international law, and the Philippines, to China’s fury, is challenging it at an UNCLOS tribunal.
In fact China often fails to clarify whether its claims are based on the nine-dashed line, or on claims to islands, rocks and shoals.
That lack of clarity alarms not just its neighbours and rival claimants, but the United States, which says it has its own national interest in the freedom of navigation in a sea through which a huge chunk of global trade passes
Also alarming is that if these arguments over tiny specks in the sea become so unmanageable, what hope is there for resolving the really big issues? And the biggest of all is the status of Taiwan, still seen by China as part of its territory, but in practice independent since 1949.
For now, Taiwan and China have a thriving commercial relationship. But polls suggest that few in Taiwan hanker after unification with the mainland. And China’s rulers still insist that one day they will have to accept just that.
- published: 27 Aug 2014
- views: 203442
Why China And Taiwan Hate Each Other
China & Hong Kong: http://testu.be/1rMbVRb
China & Tibet: http://testu.be/1IwXk3N
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Since 1949, both Taiwan's government and ...
China & Hong Kong: http://testu.be/1rMbVRb
China & Tibet: http://testu.be/1IwXk3N
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Since 1949, both Taiwan's government and Mainland China's government, have claimed validity as the legitimate, and only, "China". So, what's going on? Which is the "real" China, and why do the two countries hate each other?
Learn More:
Why Is the 1992 Consensus So Important to Beijing and Taipei?
http://www.slate.com/blogs/quora/2014/12/26/_1992_consensus_why_is_the_agreement_important_to_beijing_and_taipei.html
"The 1992 Consensus is a very important milestone that affects relations between Beijing's People's Republic of China and Taiwan (official name of the government is the Republic of China)."
Taiwan's Fading Independence Movement
http://peggy.hsieh.free.fr/THESE/new%20reference/FA-Ross.pdf
"Political developments in Taiwan over the past year have eªectively ended the independence movement there."
China's Anti-Secession Law and Hu Jintao's Taiwan Policy
http://yalejournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/105112wei.pdf
"Taiwan poses a unique challenge to China's domestic stability, the political survival of its leaders and its relations with other countries."
A policy of "one country, two systems" on Taiwan
http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/mfa_eng/ziliao_665539/3602_665543/3604_665547/t18027.shtml
"Taiwan is a sacred and inseparable part of China's territory."
Watch More:
Why Isn't Tibet Free?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdfoCD2qfWw&list;=UUgRvm1yLFoaQKhmaTqXk9SA
Why Is Hong Kong Protesting Against China?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2wzpPjVu5tg&list;=UUgRvm1yLFoaQKhmaTqXk9SA
Subscribe to TestTube Daily!
http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
_________________________
TestTube's new daily show is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more TestTube: http://testtube.com/testtubedailyshow/
Subscribe now! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=testtubenetwork
TestTube on Twitter https://twitter.com/TestTube
Trace Dominguez on Twitter https://twitter.com/TraceDominguez
TestTube on Facebook https://facebook.com/testtubenetwork
TestTube on Google+ http://gplus.to/TestTube
Download the New TestTube iOS app! http://testu.be/1ndmmMq
Special thanks to Evan Puschak for hosting TestTube!
Check Evan out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheeNerdwriter/media
wn.com/Why China And Taiwan Hate Each Other
China & Hong Kong: http://testu.be/1rMbVRb
China & Tibet: http://testu.be/1IwXk3N
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Since 1949, both Taiwan's government and Mainland China's government, have claimed validity as the legitimate, and only, "China". So, what's going on? Which is the "real" China, and why do the two countries hate each other?
Learn More:
Why Is the 1992 Consensus So Important to Beijing and Taipei?
http://www.slate.com/blogs/quora/2014/12/26/_1992_consensus_why_is_the_agreement_important_to_beijing_and_taipei.html
"The 1992 Consensus is a very important milestone that affects relations between Beijing's People's Republic of China and Taiwan (official name of the government is the Republic of China)."
Taiwan's Fading Independence Movement
http://peggy.hsieh.free.fr/THESE/new%20reference/FA-Ross.pdf
"Political developments in Taiwan over the past year have eªectively ended the independence movement there."
China's Anti-Secession Law and Hu Jintao's Taiwan Policy
http://yalejournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/105112wei.pdf
"Taiwan poses a unique challenge to China's domestic stability, the political survival of its leaders and its relations with other countries."
A policy of "one country, two systems" on Taiwan
http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/mfa_eng/ziliao_665539/3602_665543/3604_665547/t18027.shtml
"Taiwan is a sacred and inseparable part of China's territory."
Watch More:
Why Isn't Tibet Free?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdfoCD2qfWw&list;=UUgRvm1yLFoaQKhmaTqXk9SA
Why Is Hong Kong Protesting Against China?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2wzpPjVu5tg&list;=UUgRvm1yLFoaQKhmaTqXk9SA
Subscribe to TestTube Daily!
http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
_________________________
TestTube's new daily show is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more TestTube: http://testtube.com/testtubedailyshow/
Subscribe now! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=testtubenetwork
TestTube on Twitter https://twitter.com/TestTube
Trace Dominguez on Twitter https://twitter.com/TraceDominguez
TestTube on Facebook https://facebook.com/testtubenetwork
TestTube on Google+ http://gplus.to/TestTube
Download the New TestTube iOS app! http://testu.be/1ndmmMq
Special thanks to Evan Puschak for hosting TestTube!
Check Evan out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheeNerdwriter/media
- published: 04 May 2015
- views: 620810
Hu Jintao Warns U.S. Stay Out of China's Tibet and Taiwan Issues
While some media in Washington, D.C., were slamming Chinese leader Hu Jintao and his regime for human rights abuses, back in the Mainland state media was tot......
While some media in Washington, D.C., were slamming Chinese leader Hu Jintao and his regime for human rights abuses, back in the Mainland state media was tot...
wn.com/Hu Jintao Warns U.S. Stay Out Of China's Tibet And Taiwan Issues
While some media in Washington, D.C., were slamming Chinese leader Hu Jintao and his regime for human rights abuses, back in the Mainland state media was tot...
- published: 26 Jan 2011
- views: 113407
-
author: NTDTV
Taiwan to meet with Japan early next year on issue of wartime sexual slavery
대만 "내년초 日과 위안부교섭"…필리핀ㆍ네덜란드도 협상촉구
The Japanese government has agreed to hold talks with Taiwan early next year over the issue of Japan′s wartime sex slavery atro...
대만 "내년초 日과 위안부교섭"…필리핀ㆍ네덜란드도 협상촉구
The Japanese government has agreed to hold talks with Taiwan early next year over the issue of Japan′s wartime sex slavery atrocities against Taiwanese women.
This comes after the Taiwanese government called on the Japanese government to apologise and offer compensation, similar to the landmark agreement reached by Korea and Japan on Monday.
Kwon Jang-Ho files this report.
The Taiwanese government could strike a deal, similar to the one agreed between Korea and Japan earlier this week.
Speaking to local press on Wednesday, Taiwan′s foreign minister, David Lin, said the two governments will meet early next year to discuss the issue of the Japanese military′s sexual enslavement of women during World War II.
Lin said they will negotiate on monetary compensation and a formal apology to Taiwanese victims.
″Our most important stance on this issue is to protect the dignity and interests of Taiwanese victims. Our stance is that we urge the Japanese government to clearly make an apology and pay compensation.″
Taiwan was under Japanese colonial rule for fifty years, up to the end of the second world war.
Over two-thousand women were thought to have been forced into sexual slavery but only four are still alive today.
Victims from the Philippines are also demanding a similar agreement.
Kyodo News reported on Tuesday, the head of an organization of former Filipino ″comfort women″ said she ″respected the decision of the Koreans″ but that their government also needs to act.
Of the 174 original members of this group, less than a hundred are still alive today.
Victims from as far away as the Netherlands are also asking for an apology and compensation.
There are thought to have been about 400 Dutch women who were captured and enslaved from Dutch colonies in Asia.
Some victims were offered compensation ten years ago, but many refused, saying legal acknowledgement by Japan of its war crimes was more important.
Kwon Jang-Ho, Arirang News.
Visit ‘Arirang News’ Official Pages
Facebook(NEWS): http://www.facebook.com/newsarirang
Homepage: http://www.arirang.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/arirangtv
Twitter: http://twitter.com/arirangworld
Instagram: http://instagram.com/arirangworld
wn.com/Taiwan To Meet With Japan Early Next Year On Issue Of Wartime Sexual Slavery
대만 "내년초 日과 위안부교섭"…필리핀ㆍ네덜란드도 협상촉구
The Japanese government has agreed to hold talks with Taiwan early next year over the issue of Japan′s wartime sex slavery atrocities against Taiwanese women.
This comes after the Taiwanese government called on the Japanese government to apologise and offer compensation, similar to the landmark agreement reached by Korea and Japan on Monday.
Kwon Jang-Ho files this report.
The Taiwanese government could strike a deal, similar to the one agreed between Korea and Japan earlier this week.
Speaking to local press on Wednesday, Taiwan′s foreign minister, David Lin, said the two governments will meet early next year to discuss the issue of the Japanese military′s sexual enslavement of women during World War II.
Lin said they will negotiate on monetary compensation and a formal apology to Taiwanese victims.
″Our most important stance on this issue is to protect the dignity and interests of Taiwanese victims. Our stance is that we urge the Japanese government to clearly make an apology and pay compensation.″
Taiwan was under Japanese colonial rule for fifty years, up to the end of the second world war.
Over two-thousand women were thought to have been forced into sexual slavery but only four are still alive today.
Victims from the Philippines are also demanding a similar agreement.
Kyodo News reported on Tuesday, the head of an organization of former Filipino ″comfort women″ said she ″respected the decision of the Koreans″ but that their government also needs to act.
Of the 174 original members of this group, less than a hundred are still alive today.
Victims from as far away as the Netherlands are also asking for an apology and compensation.
There are thought to have been about 400 Dutch women who were captured and enslaved from Dutch colonies in Asia.
Some victims were offered compensation ten years ago, but many refused, saying legal acknowledgement by Japan of its war crimes was more important.
Kwon Jang-Ho, Arirang News.
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- published: 31 Dec 2015
- views: 34
CHINA: TAIWAN ISSUE - SANDY BERGER URGES PEACEFUL SOLUTION
Natural Sound
Urging China to have patience, a senior aide to President Bill Clinton has reportedly told Chinese leaders that tensions could force Washingto...
Natural Sound
Urging China to have patience, a senior aide to President Bill Clinton has reportedly told Chinese leaders that tensions could force Washington to sell the Taiwanese military more weapons.
A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said National Security Adviser Sandy Berger also "reaffirmed in very clear terms" that Washington still acknowledges China's claim to Taiwan and wants a peaceful, negotiated solution.
Berger has been on a two-day mission to counsel restraint following the Taiwanese presidential election earlier this month.
In talks with China's president, premier and foreign policy team, he discussed arms proliferation, U-S efforts to censure Beijing before a U-N human rights panel and a pending congressional vote on Chinese trading rights.
But Taiwan consumed the talks, often provoking passionate Chinese responses.
Chinese state television reported President Jiang Zemin urged the U-S to "adopt a very cautious attitude" to the Sino-U-S relationship in light of the Taiwan issue.
The exchanges underscored Washington's delicate role in an unfinished civil war between China and Taiwan.
Beijing still claims Taiwan as part of its territory even though they have been governed separately since splitting 51 years ago.
Once a close ally of Taiwan, Washington is still by law obligated to help the island maintain its defences.
China blames Washington's support for the island, particularly arms sales, for delaying unification and continually stress that "the Taiwan issue is purely an internal affair".
That the Taiwan issue remains unresolved has become a focus of Sino-U-S relations.
China fanned tensions by threatening to use force against Taiwan to intimidate Taiwanese ahead of their March 18 presidential election.
Since the victory of Chen Shui-bian, an opposition candidate whose party has favoured formal independence for the island, China has tried to keep up the verbal pressure.
Berger was the second high-level administration official in two weeks to come to Beijing to urge Chinese restraint over Taiwan and try to allay concerns about Washington's intentions.
Bilateral ties have been rocky since NATO's war with Yugoslavia and the bombing of China's embassy in Belgrade last year.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/7ed255b19b3c9cd651235346d87578b6
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/China Taiwan Issue Sandy Berger Urges Peaceful Solution
Natural Sound
Urging China to have patience, a senior aide to President Bill Clinton has reportedly told Chinese leaders that tensions could force Washington to sell the Taiwanese military more weapons.
A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said National Security Adviser Sandy Berger also "reaffirmed in very clear terms" that Washington still acknowledges China's claim to Taiwan and wants a peaceful, negotiated solution.
Berger has been on a two-day mission to counsel restraint following the Taiwanese presidential election earlier this month.
In talks with China's president, premier and foreign policy team, he discussed arms proliferation, U-S efforts to censure Beijing before a U-N human rights panel and a pending congressional vote on Chinese trading rights.
But Taiwan consumed the talks, often provoking passionate Chinese responses.
Chinese state television reported President Jiang Zemin urged the U-S to "adopt a very cautious attitude" to the Sino-U-S relationship in light of the Taiwan issue.
The exchanges underscored Washington's delicate role in an unfinished civil war between China and Taiwan.
Beijing still claims Taiwan as part of its territory even though they have been governed separately since splitting 51 years ago.
Once a close ally of Taiwan, Washington is still by law obligated to help the island maintain its defences.
China blames Washington's support for the island, particularly arms sales, for delaying unification and continually stress that "the Taiwan issue is purely an internal affair".
That the Taiwan issue remains unresolved has become a focus of Sino-U-S relations.
China fanned tensions by threatening to use force against Taiwan to intimidate Taiwanese ahead of their March 18 presidential election.
Since the victory of Chen Shui-bian, an opposition candidate whose party has favoured formal independence for the island, China has tried to keep up the verbal pressure.
Berger was the second high-level administration official in two weeks to come to Beijing to urge Chinese restraint over Taiwan and try to allay concerns about Washington's intentions.
Bilateral ties have been rocky since NATO's war with Yugoslavia and the bombing of China's embassy in Belgrade last year.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/7ed255b19b3c9cd651235346d87578b6
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
USA: STATE DEPARTMENT SPOKESMAN RUBIN ON CHINA-TAIWAN ISSUE
English/Nat
Reports in a Taiwanese newspaper on Tuesday morning suggest Taipei will tell China that President Lee Teng-hui's statehood declaration made on Ju...
English/Nat
Reports in a Taiwanese newspaper on Tuesday morning suggest Taipei will tell China that President Lee Teng-hui's statehood declaration made on July 9 was intended to prepare Taiwan for eventual reunification with the mainland and not a step toward independence.
The apparent bid to pacify an outraged Beijing follows China's warning to the United States on Sunday that it would consider using force if Taiwan tries to split from the mainland.
It was the highest-level threat so far in a Chinese war of words that began earlier this month sparked after Taiwanese president, Lee Teng-hui, called for China to recognise Taiwan's sovereignty as a state rather than part of one-China.
U-S officials are calling for both countries to solve the problem diplomatically before tensions escalate out of control.
SUGGESTED VOICE - OVER:
China, which regards Taiwan as a renegade province, says that a recent comment by Taiwan's president, claiming China and Taiwan had a "state-to-state" relationship, was a step toward declaring formal independence.
It's a move China has pledged to prevent by force if necessary.
In Washington on Monday, U-S state department spokesman, James Rubin, reaffirmed U-S concern that the dispute be resolved peacefully, but stopped short of revealing any change in U-S attitude over the "One-China" policy it has so far supported.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
"It's no secret that a refusal to rule out or renounce the use of force is part of P-R-C's long standing position on this. But the long standing position of the United States by contrast is that the future of Taiwan is a matter for the Chinese people on both sides of the Straits to resolve. The United States has an abiding interest that any resolution be peaceful."
SUPER CAPTION: Jamie Rubin, State Department spokesman
In a phone conversation between Chinese President Jiang Zemin and President Clinton, Rubin says Clinton expressed his concerns that a dialogue take place between the two before the situation deteriorates.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
"The president also made the point that a deterioration of the atmosphere in the Straits and the climate there serves no-one's interest. I'm not in a position to comment on any intelligence issue associated with this but we do not have suggestions that there is, as of today, a military mobilisation going on."
SUPER CAPTION: Jamie Rubin, spokesman for the State Department
China and Taiwan have been ruled separately since anti-communist Nationalists fled to the island amid civil war 50 years ago.
Both Taiwan and China say they are part of the same country.
Taiwan says it will be sending a special envoy to the United States to discuss the situation.
This clearly would infuriate China since the United States formally recognizes a one-China policy with the mainland itself.
But Rubin says Secretary Albright has no plans to meet with any high-level ranking Taiwanese envoy in Washington.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
"I do believe that we are going to be in regular contact at fairly high levels, in our unofficial dialogue with Taiwan and that will occur but I'm not aware of the special envoy coming here. I know there was some talk of that but I don't think that's the way things will play out in the next few days."
SUPER CAPTION: Jamie Rubin, spokesman for the State Department
In Taiwan, where the government has been dismissing fears of Chinese military action, Premier Vincent Siew called on the Taiwanese people to stay "cool and confident."
But, despite the Taiwanese government's attempts to reassure the public, the dispute has caused turmoil on the island, where the main stock index has fallen 13 percent since Tuesday.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/158a2a8dc51ca9f2c373badc317504e4
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/USA State Department Spokesman Rubin On China Taiwan Issue
English/Nat
Reports in a Taiwanese newspaper on Tuesday morning suggest Taipei will tell China that President Lee Teng-hui's statehood declaration made on July 9 was intended to prepare Taiwan for eventual reunification with the mainland and not a step toward independence.
The apparent bid to pacify an outraged Beijing follows China's warning to the United States on Sunday that it would consider using force if Taiwan tries to split from the mainland.
It was the highest-level threat so far in a Chinese war of words that began earlier this month sparked after Taiwanese president, Lee Teng-hui, called for China to recognise Taiwan's sovereignty as a state rather than part of one-China.
U-S officials are calling for both countries to solve the problem diplomatically before tensions escalate out of control.
SUGGESTED VOICE - OVER:
China, which regards Taiwan as a renegade province, says that a recent comment by Taiwan's president, claiming China and Taiwan had a "state-to-state" relationship, was a step toward declaring formal independence.
It's a move China has pledged to prevent by force if necessary.
In Washington on Monday, U-S state department spokesman, James Rubin, reaffirmed U-S concern that the dispute be resolved peacefully, but stopped short of revealing any change in U-S attitude over the "One-China" policy it has so far supported.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
"It's no secret that a refusal to rule out or renounce the use of force is part of P-R-C's long standing position on this. But the long standing position of the United States by contrast is that the future of Taiwan is a matter for the Chinese people on both sides of the Straits to resolve. The United States has an abiding interest that any resolution be peaceful."
SUPER CAPTION: Jamie Rubin, State Department spokesman
In a phone conversation between Chinese President Jiang Zemin and President Clinton, Rubin says Clinton expressed his concerns that a dialogue take place between the two before the situation deteriorates.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
"The president also made the point that a deterioration of the atmosphere in the Straits and the climate there serves no-one's interest. I'm not in a position to comment on any intelligence issue associated with this but we do not have suggestions that there is, as of today, a military mobilisation going on."
SUPER CAPTION: Jamie Rubin, spokesman for the State Department
China and Taiwan have been ruled separately since anti-communist Nationalists fled to the island amid civil war 50 years ago.
Both Taiwan and China say they are part of the same country.
Taiwan says it will be sending a special envoy to the United States to discuss the situation.
This clearly would infuriate China since the United States formally recognizes a one-China policy with the mainland itself.
But Rubin says Secretary Albright has no plans to meet with any high-level ranking Taiwanese envoy in Washington.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
"I do believe that we are going to be in regular contact at fairly high levels, in our unofficial dialogue with Taiwan and that will occur but I'm not aware of the special envoy coming here. I know there was some talk of that but I don't think that's the way things will play out in the next few days."
SUPER CAPTION: Jamie Rubin, spokesman for the State Department
In Taiwan, where the government has been dismissing fears of Chinese military action, Premier Vincent Siew called on the Taiwanese people to stay "cool and confident."
But, despite the Taiwanese government's attempts to reassure the public, the dispute has caused turmoil on the island, where the main stock index has fallen 13 percent since Tuesday.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/158a2a8dc51ca9f2c373badc317504e4
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Taiwan issue is democracy - 3
New Taiwan in 1990
USA supports Taiwan democracy
Taiwan issue is democracy
US' policy Taiwan democracy
Taiwan & PRC tie in language but not democracy
What end d...
New Taiwan in 1990
USA supports Taiwan democracy
Taiwan issue is democracy
US' policy Taiwan democracy
Taiwan & PRC tie in language but not democracy
What end do we see of Taiwan?
Time for Xi Jingping to follow Chiang Ching-Kuo's path
Dan Blumenthal
Director of Asian Studies
American Enterprise Institute (AEI)
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Time for Xi Jinping to Follow Chiang Ching-kuo's Path?
Recently Ma Ying-jeou called upon Xi to finish Deng Xiaoping's revolution and begin the process of moving to a constitutional democracy. Is Taiwan a model of Chinese democracy? How would democratization in China impact the future of ROC-China ties? How would a democratized China affect US interests in the Asia-Pacific?
wn.com/Taiwan Issue Is Democracy 3
New Taiwan in 1990
USA supports Taiwan democracy
Taiwan issue is democracy
US' policy Taiwan democracy
Taiwan & PRC tie in language but not democracy
What end do we see of Taiwan?
Time for Xi Jingping to follow Chiang Ching-Kuo's path
Dan Blumenthal
Director of Asian Studies
American Enterprise Institute (AEI)
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Time for Xi Jinping to Follow Chiang Ching-kuo's Path?
Recently Ma Ying-jeou called upon Xi to finish Deng Xiaoping's revolution and begin the process of moving to a constitutional democracy. Is Taiwan a model of Chinese democracy? How would democratization in China impact the future of ROC-China ties? How would a democratized China affect US interests in the Asia-Pacific?
- published: 12 Nov 2014
- views: 3
Taiwan: The Wedge Issue in the U.S.-China Relationship by Dr. John Copper
On November 13, 2013, Dr. John Copper, Professor of International Studies at Rhodes College, discusses the role of Taiwan in the relationship between China a......
On November 13, 2013, Dr. John Copper, Professor of International Studies at Rhodes College, discusses the role of Taiwan in the relationship between China a...
wn.com/Taiwan The Wedge Issue In The U.S. China Relationship By Dr. John Copper
On November 13, 2013, Dr. John Copper, Professor of International Studies at Rhodes College, discusses the role of Taiwan in the relationship between China a...
GWO Taiwan News~Hot Issue【Việt】Ý kiến của người Việt Nam tại Đài Loan về việc bạo động tại Việt Nam.
在台越南人看越南暴動 Thưa quý vị, gần đây do Trung Quốc ngang nhiên lắp đặt giàn khoan trong khu vực đặc quyền kinh tế biển (EEZ) của Việt Nam, làm cho sự xung đột chủ......
在台越南人看越南暴動 Thưa quý vị, gần đây do Trung Quốc ngang nhiên lắp đặt giàn khoan trong khu vực đặc quyền kinh tế biển (EEZ) của Việt Nam, làm cho sự xung đột chủ...
wn.com/Gwo Taiwan News~Hot Issue【Việt】Ý Kiến Của Người Việt Nam Tại Đài Loan Về Việc Bạo Động Tại Việt Nam.
在台越南人看越南暴動 Thưa quý vị, gần đây do Trung Quốc ngang nhiên lắp đặt giàn khoan trong khu vực đặc quyền kinh tế biển (EEZ) của Việt Nam, làm cho sự xung đột chủ...
大誌雜誌 The Big Issue Taiwan
在捷運站口站著那個穿著橘紅色背心的男人,背心上寫著斗大的The Big Issue,右手高舉著一本雜誌,一本屬於愚人世代的雜誌,他微笑著。...
在捷運站口站著那個穿著橘紅色背心的男人,背心上寫著斗大的The Big Issue,右手高舉著一本雜誌,一本屬於愚人世代的雜誌,他微笑著。
wn.com/大誌雜誌 The Big Issue Taiwan
在捷運站口站著那個穿著橘紅色背心的男人,背心上寫著斗大的The Big Issue,右手高舉著一本雜誌,一本屬於愚人世代的雜誌,他微笑著。
- published: 17 Nov 2013
- views: 178
-
author: 郭薏新
Chinese Premier discusses Taiwan issue (Wen Jiabao meets the press Pt 2)
Wen Jiabao speaks about the political reform within the Communist Party, Taiwan relations and his performance before he steps down as the premier next year....
Wen Jiabao speaks about the political reform within the Communist Party, Taiwan relations and his performance before he steps down as the premier next year.
wn.com/Chinese Premier Discusses Taiwan Issue (Wen Jiabao Meets The Press Pt 2)
Wen Jiabao speaks about the political reform within the Communist Party, Taiwan relations and his performance before he steps down as the premier next year.
- published: 29 Jul 2013
- views: 16
-
author: SPH Razor
Flexum, Dyzee, Issue, Rubberlegz, Gred "Fun Times in Taipei" | STRIFE. | Challenge Cup 2013 Taiwan
Hanging out in Taiwan for Challenge Cup 2013! The Judges for Challenge Cup: Flexum, Dyzee, Issue, Rubberlegz, and Gred Music by DJ Fleg Breakfree Promo Track......
Hanging out in Taiwan for Challenge Cup 2013! The Judges for Challenge Cup: Flexum, Dyzee, Issue, Rubberlegz, and Gred Music by DJ Fleg Breakfree Promo Track...
wn.com/Flexum, Dyzee, Issue, Rubberlegz, Gred Fun Times In Taipei | Strife. | Challenge Cup 2013 Taiwan
Hanging out in Taiwan for Challenge Cup 2013! The Judges for Challenge Cup: Flexum, Dyzee, Issue, Rubberlegz, and Gred Music by DJ Fleg Breakfree Promo Track...
- published: 03 Dec 2013
- views: 21373
-
author: Strife.tv
GWO Taiwan News: Hot Issue【Việt】(越南新聞) 台灣第一個多國語新聞台
GWO Taiwan News
越南政府95號議定書通緝逃逸越勞!
在台逃逸越勞2014年3月10日前務必自行到案,
否則,返國後重罰3000-5000美金。
在台越南朋友苦無正確資訊,人心惶惶、謠言四起。
GWO第一手官方專訪說分明!
Trưởng ban quản lý lao động VPKTVNTĐB &...
GWO Taiwan News
越南政府95號議定書通緝逃逸越勞!
在台逃逸越勞2014年3月10日前務必自行到案,
否則,返國後重罰3000-5000美金。
在台越南朋友苦無正確資訊,人心惶惶、謠言四起。
GWO第一手官方專訪說分明!
Trưởng ban quản lý lao động VPKTVNTĐB & Phó trưởng đội chuyên cần sở Di Dân trả lời phỏng vấn về Nghị định xử phạt lao động bỏ trốn tại Đài Loan.
------------節目說明-----Channel Info----------------
Hiệp hội phát triển người nước ngoài làm việc tại Đài Loan quan tâm bạn!
GWO là tổ chức được thành lập dành cho người lao động nước ngoài tại Đài
Loan,
Chương trình GWONews cung cấp các thông tin mới nhất về việc làm, cuộc
sống, giáo dục
v.v... tại Đài Loan. Hiện tại GWO gồm có Tiếng Anh, Nhật, Việt Nam, Indo,
Thái Lan, Campuchia.
Rất mong quý khán giả sẽ ủng hộ cho chương trình GWO.
❀GWO Taiwan News: 台灣第一個多國語言新聞台!
GWO(台灣外籍勞動者發展協會)旨為幫助新住民在台灣生活得更便利!我們提供的GWO Taiwan News為台灣第一個多國語言線上新聞台,新聞內容包含工作、旅遊、教育、勞工相關議題等,讓外國朋友用自己的母語看新聞。
目前提供語言:英、日、越、印尼、印度、印尼、泰、柬、他加祿語
❁ YouTube 頻道: 訂閱我們的頻道、或幫影片按讚支持!
http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2Nbaab9hnhH-_C9ca0EuWA
❁ Facebook 粉絲專頁: 幫我們的專頁按讚,follow最快的更新!若想直接聯絡GWO,也可以傳訊息給我們。
http://www.facebook.com/GWOTaiwanNews
❀GWO Taiwan News: Your First Multi-language Online News!
GWO is an organization aimed to help new immigrants in Taiwan (foreigners in Taiwan). Focused mainly on labor issues, we offer free and online news in various languages on our YouTube channel.
GWO Taiwan News is the very first multi-language news channel in Taiwan. Check out what's going on lately and watch the news in your mother tongue. Get information on working, traveling, education, and so on! Explore Taiwan with our foreign anchors and enjoy the news.
Now available in: English, Japanese, Vietnamese, Indonesian, Thai, Hindi, Cambodian, and Tagalog.
❁ YouTube channel: Please subscribe!
http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2Nbaab9hnhH-_C9ca0EuWA
❁ Leave comments to help us improve; if you like our channel, please subscribe and give us a big thumbs up to show your support!
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wn.com/Gwo Taiwan News Hot Issue【Việt】(越南新聞) 台灣第一個多國語新聞台
GWO Taiwan News
越南政府95號議定書通緝逃逸越勞!
在台逃逸越勞2014年3月10日前務必自行到案,
否則,返國後重罰3000-5000美金。
在台越南朋友苦無正確資訊,人心惶惶、謠言四起。
GWO第一手官方專訪說分明!
Trưởng ban quản lý lao động VPKTVNTĐB & Phó trưởng đội chuyên cần sở Di Dân trả lời phỏng vấn về Nghị định xử phạt lao động bỏ trốn tại Đài Loan.
------------節目說明-----Channel Info----------------
Hiệp hội phát triển người nước ngoài làm việc tại Đài Loan quan tâm bạn!
GWO là tổ chức được thành lập dành cho người lao động nước ngoài tại Đài
Loan,
Chương trình GWONews cung cấp các thông tin mới nhất về việc làm, cuộc
sống, giáo dục
v.v... tại Đài Loan. Hiện tại GWO gồm có Tiếng Anh, Nhật, Việt Nam, Indo,
Thái Lan, Campuchia.
Rất mong quý khán giả sẽ ủng hộ cho chương trình GWO.
❀GWO Taiwan News: 台灣第一個多國語言新聞台!
GWO(台灣外籍勞動者發展協會)旨為幫助新住民在台灣生活得更便利!我們提供的GWO Taiwan News為台灣第一個多國語言線上新聞台,新聞內容包含工作、旅遊、教育、勞工相關議題等,讓外國朋友用自己的母語看新聞。
目前提供語言:英、日、越、印尼、印度、印尼、泰、柬、他加祿語
❁ YouTube 頻道: 訂閱我們的頻道、或幫影片按讚支持!
http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2Nbaab9hnhH-_C9ca0EuWA
❁ Facebook 粉絲專頁: 幫我們的專頁按讚,follow最快的更新!若想直接聯絡GWO,也可以傳訊息給我們。
http://www.facebook.com/GWOTaiwanNews
❀GWO Taiwan News: Your First Multi-language Online News!
GWO is an organization aimed to help new immigrants in Taiwan (foreigners in Taiwan). Focused mainly on labor issues, we offer free and online news in various languages on our YouTube channel.
GWO Taiwan News is the very first multi-language news channel in Taiwan. Check out what's going on lately and watch the news in your mother tongue. Get information on working, traveling, education, and so on! Explore Taiwan with our foreign anchors and enjoy the news.
Now available in: English, Japanese, Vietnamese, Indonesian, Thai, Hindi, Cambodian, and Tagalog.
❁ YouTube channel: Please subscribe!
http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2Nbaab9hnhH-_C9ca0EuWA
❁ Leave comments to help us improve; if you like our channel, please subscribe and give us a big thumbs up to show your support!
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- published: 28 Feb 2014
- views: 7985
Protesters occupying Taiwan's parliament issue ultimatum
Protesters barricade themselves inside Taiwan's parliament for a third straight day, threatening "further action" if the government pushes ahead with its pla......
Protesters barricade themselves inside Taiwan's parliament for a third straight day, threatening "further action" if the government pushes ahead with its pla...
wn.com/Protesters Occupying Taiwan's Parliament Issue Ultimatum
Protesters barricade themselves inside Taiwan's parliament for a third straight day, threatening "further action" if the government pushes ahead with its pla...
video about Taiwan immigration issue
first cut of video: Krystyna, Kevin about foreigners who grew up in Taiwan....
first cut of video: Krystyna, Kevin about foreigners who grew up in Taiwan.
wn.com/Video About Taiwan Immigration Issue
first cut of video: Krystyna, Kevin about foreigners who grew up in Taiwan.
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Taiwan Agriculture Issue B copy 20151208 720p
-
The election results are in, VW has a new emission issue and Taiwan and China are set to meet
The Election Day results include a blow against legalizing marijuana and a win for Airbnb, Missouri delayed the execution of a man and more people have got sick after eating Chipotle.
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As health officials issue warnings about poor air quality, various face masks prove ineffective
Haze brought by northeasterly winds caused northern areas in Taiwan this morning to receive a red-level pollution alert, with Yunlin’s Taixi District experiencing a purple-level pollution alert, Taiwan’s severest pollution warning. Many people sought to protect themselves by wearing masks. However, testing by National Taiwan University’s College of Public Health found that activated carbon masks o
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Afrojack@RTU Taiwan - Ten Feet Tall + technical issue
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g0v tw hackath15n 小組突擊en ISSUE Taiwan 台灣好問題 2015資料科學黑客松
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g0v tw hackath15n 提案 ISSUE Taiwan 台灣好問題 2015資料科學黑客松
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夢想新幹線....幫街友自力更生的熱血雜誌 The Big Issue Taiwan... 李取中20150810
夢想新幹線https://www.facebook.com/groups/110879029259276/
The Big Issue Taiwan
大智文創於2009年底取得 The Big Issue Taiwan 授權發行,並於2010年四月一日正式創刊。這本在英國發行已有二十年的刊物,能同樣成功的以社會企業的模式在台灣推行,讓所有有意願工作的街友或社會弱勢的人們,能夠得到一個自營生計的機會,讓他們能夠藉由雜誌的販售,重建個人的信心與尊嚴,進而重新取回生活的主導權。
TBI的存在,提供給無家可歸者和短期安置的人們,讓他們有機會透過銷售雜誌給一般公眾來獲取合法的收入。你將會看到穿著制服、配戴識別證的販賣者在捷運站外手持雜誌銷售,他們是一群經過徵選及訓練輔導的遊民或弱勢族群,衡量自己的財務狀況及銷售能力,於出刊時用現金批貨,批貨成本約是標價的一半,販售所得全數歸自己所有。
TBI目前已
-
China - Talks with Taiwan
China and Taiwan are set to issue a document at the end of talks
this week which will underline both sides' commitment to avoiding
political rows, state media reports said on Thursday (3/2).
SHOWS:
BEIJING, CHINA 3/2
0.00 chiao given guided tour of joint venture milk powder
factory
0.03 chiao asking questions at factory
0.10 chiao walks through factory
0.15 delegates si
-
TAIWAN: PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS: INDEPENDENCE ISSUE
English/Nat
Taiwan has begun voting for a new legislature in an election regarded by many as a referendum on the prospect of independence from China.
The election comes amid rising tensions between Taiwan and China, which claims sovereignty over the island and is wary that democracy could prompt it to pursue a separatist course.
And the vote is likely to be closely watched by China fo
-
China - Territorial Claims To Taiwan A Live Issue
T/I: 10:56:11 DSSA 10:20:40 DSSO
China said on Thursday (9/2) that a trade war with the United
States over intellectual property could be averted. China's Foreign
Ministry spokesman Chen Jian also tackled Taiwan - .China has long
regarded Taiwan as a renegade province.=
SHOWS:
BEIJING, CHINA 9/2:
0.00 ws of presser with foreign ministry spokesman, chen jian
0.09 cutaway
-
USA: WASHINGTON: CONTROVERSY OVER VISA FOR TAIWAN PRESIDENT
English/Nat
The Chinese government has warned Washington not to issue a visa to the vice president of Taiwan, Li Yuan-zu.
But the State Department has said the visa won't influence U.S.-China relations.
Disputes over this issue have provoked sharp differences between China and the U.S. in recent years, and a new controversy now could threaten a recent thaw in relations.
The State Depa
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Taiwan to issue new passports with country's name on cover
Taipei, Taiwan, 30 August 2003
1. People filling out forms to apply for new passports
2. Various shots of people filling out forms
3. Mid shot of a man filling out a form, checking a passport
4. Copies of the old passport (left) and the new one with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
5. Close up on a copy of new passport with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
Taipei, Taiwan, 29 August 2003
6. Wide
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VOICER Taiwan to issue passports with country's name on cover
VOICED BY KATHERINE BONNER
30 August 2003
00 00 People filling out forms to apply for new passports
00 05 Close up filling out forms checking his passport
00 10 Copies of the old passport (left) and the new one with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
00 15 Close up on a copy of new passport with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
00 20 Side shot people filling out forms
00 24 Wide shot in off
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Taiwanese president announces ballot issue for controversial referendum
TAI REFERENDUM 160104N
Recent FILE - Taipei
1. Various shots of president Chen Shui-bian at campaign rallies
January 16, 2003, Taipei
2. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin), Chen Shui-bian, Taiwanese president:
"First of all, we will ask our citizens, Should mainland China refuse to withdraw the missiles it has targeted at Taiwan and to openly renounce the use of force against us, would you agree th
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The Big Issue Taiwan Ltd.李取中(104年度新光人壽CSR講座)2015/07/06
透過 YouTube 影片記錄
<新光人壽CSR講座>
時間:2015/07/06(一)17:00-19:00
地點:新光人壽摩天大樓43樓
講題:<百元大誌>讓街友與社會企業雙贏
講師:李取中(大誌文創創辦人暨總編輯)
<青年世代的社會參與>Stay hungry, Stay foolish.愚人世代的社會參與〜一本社會企業雜誌的運作與發展
主動參與的精神:
一、與其伸手要,不如舉手賣
二、一本社會企業雜誌,一段改變遊民生活的歷程
三、創立就是為了賺錢〜賺改變社會的錢
公益的思想〜世代的歌頌:
一、社會企業販賣「產品」而非憐憫與同情
二、走在對的路上,莫忘初衷
<The Big Issue / 大誌雜誌 | 大智文創>
http://www.bigissue.tw/
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Taiwan status is an unsettled issue - 4
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Taiwan Democracy Project
July 1, 2015 Wednesday 4:15pmGoldman Conference Room
4th Floor East Wing E409, Encina Hall
616 Serra Street, Stanford, California 94305
http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/tpp_and_taiwan_n
-
Why is TPP relevant to Taiwan's national security? - 3
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Taiwan Democracy Project
July 1, 2015 Wednesday 4:15pmGoldman Conference Room
4th Floor East Wing E409, Encina Hall
616 Serra Street, Stanford, California 94305
http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/tpp_and_taiwan_n
-
Is int'l law Taiwan's enemy? - 1
1. What is the legal issue while China attack Taiwan?
2. WTO is the most important organizations Taiwan has now.
3. Legal status of Taiwan
4. GATT membership for Taiwan
5. Taiwan and China are two separate & equal members in the int'l
organization
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Deve
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Cha Seung Won — Elle (Taiwan) June Issue 2015
Cha Seung Won - Elle (Taiwan) June Issue ‘15
The election results are in, VW has a new emission issue and Taiwan and China are set to meet
The Election Day results include a blow against legalizing marijuana and a win for Airbnb, Missouri delayed the execution of a man and more people have got sick...
The Election Day results include a blow against legalizing marijuana and a win for Airbnb, Missouri delayed the execution of a man and more people have got sick after eating Chipotle.
wn.com/The Election Results Are In, Vw Has A New Emission Issue And Taiwan And China Are Set To Meet
The Election Day results include a blow against legalizing marijuana and a win for Airbnb, Missouri delayed the execution of a man and more people have got sick after eating Chipotle.
- published: 04 Nov 2015
- views: 90
As health officials issue warnings about poor air quality, various face masks prove ineffective
Haze brought by northeasterly winds caused northern areas in Taiwan this morning to receive a red-level pollution alert, with Yunlin’s Taixi District experienci...
Haze brought by northeasterly winds caused northern areas in Taiwan this morning to receive a red-level pollution alert, with Yunlin’s Taixi District experiencing a purple-level pollution alert, Taiwan’s severest pollution warning. Many people sought to protect themselves by wearing masks. However, testing by National Taiwan University’s College of Public Health found that activated carbon masks only filter around 30 percent of pollutants. The sky is gray and hazy due to northeasterly winds. This has led many pedestrians to don masks though doctors have warned that activated carbon masks may only have a limited effect when it comes to protection from small pollutant particles known as PM2.5.Masks currently sold on the market have no way of stopping this air pollution."(Typical) masks are useless, even using a double layer isn’t effective either.Latest tests from the National Taiwan University College of Public Health showed that the main function of activated carbon masks is to isolate wearers from foul smells in the air. They can filter only 30 percent of PM2.5. Furthermore, typical medical masks are similarly ineffective.Chen Chih-ChiehNTU College of Public Health(Typical) masks used in hospitals are able to fulfill the goal of preventing the transmission of disease but they have little effect against preventing PM2.5.Experts recommend the N95 masks as being the most effective, blocking upwards of 95 percent of PM2.5.
wn.com/As Health Officials Issue Warnings About Poor Air Quality, Various Face Masks Prove Ineffective
Haze brought by northeasterly winds caused northern areas in Taiwan this morning to receive a red-level pollution alert, with Yunlin’s Taixi District experiencing a purple-level pollution alert, Taiwan’s severest pollution warning. Many people sought to protect themselves by wearing masks. However, testing by National Taiwan University’s College of Public Health found that activated carbon masks only filter around 30 percent of pollutants. The sky is gray and hazy due to northeasterly winds. This has led many pedestrians to don masks though doctors have warned that activated carbon masks may only have a limited effect when it comes to protection from small pollutant particles known as PM2.5.Masks currently sold on the market have no way of stopping this air pollution."(Typical) masks are useless, even using a double layer isn’t effective either.Latest tests from the National Taiwan University College of Public Health showed that the main function of activated carbon masks is to isolate wearers from foul smells in the air. They can filter only 30 percent of PM2.5. Furthermore, typical medical masks are similarly ineffective.Chen Chih-ChiehNTU College of Public Health(Typical) masks used in hospitals are able to fulfill the goal of preventing the transmission of disease but they have little effect against preventing PM2.5.Experts recommend the N95 masks as being the most effective, blocking upwards of 95 percent of PM2.5.
- published: 01 Nov 2015
- views: 38
夢想新幹線....幫街友自力更生的熱血雜誌 The Big Issue Taiwan... 李取中20150810
夢想新幹線https://www.facebook.com/groups/110879029259276/
The Big Issue Taiwan
大智文創於2009年底取得 The Big Issue Taiwan 授權發行,並於2010年四月一日正式創刊。這本在英國發行已有二十年的刊物,能同樣成功的以社會企業的...
夢想新幹線https://www.facebook.com/groups/110879029259276/
The Big Issue Taiwan
大智文創於2009年底取得 The Big Issue Taiwan 授權發行,並於2010年四月一日正式創刊。這本在英國發行已有二十年的刊物,能同樣成功的以社會企業的模式在台灣推行,讓所有有意願工作的街友或社會弱勢的人們,能夠得到一個自營生計的機會,讓他們能夠藉由雜誌的販售,重建個人的信心與尊嚴,進而重新取回生活的主導權。
TBI的存在,提供給無家可歸者和短期安置的人們,讓他們有機會透過銷售雜誌給一般公眾來獲取合法的收入。你將會看到穿著制服、配戴識別證的販賣者在捷運站外手持雜誌銷售,他們是一群經過徵選及訓練輔導的遊民或弱勢族群,衡量自己的財務狀況及銷售能力,於出刊時用現金批貨,批貨成本約是標價的一半,販售所得全數歸自己所有。
TBI目前已經幫助超過2500個無家可歸和短期安置的人們。在英國,TBI雜誌每週有超過67萬以上的讀者。
wn.com/夢想新幹線....幫街友自力更生的熱血雜誌 The Big Issue Taiwan... 李取中20150810
夢想新幹線https://www.facebook.com/groups/110879029259276/
The Big Issue Taiwan
大智文創於2009年底取得 The Big Issue Taiwan 授權發行,並於2010年四月一日正式創刊。這本在英國發行已有二十年的刊物,能同樣成功的以社會企業的模式在台灣推行,讓所有有意願工作的街友或社會弱勢的人們,能夠得到一個自營生計的機會,讓他們能夠藉由雜誌的販售,重建個人的信心與尊嚴,進而重新取回生活的主導權。
TBI的存在,提供給無家可歸者和短期安置的人們,讓他們有機會透過銷售雜誌給一般公眾來獲取合法的收入。你將會看到穿著制服、配戴識別證的販賣者在捷運站外手持雜誌銷售,他們是一群經過徵選及訓練輔導的遊民或弱勢族群,衡量自己的財務狀況及銷售能力,於出刊時用現金批貨,批貨成本約是標價的一半,販售所得全數歸自己所有。
TBI目前已經幫助超過2500個無家可歸和短期安置的人們。在英國,TBI雜誌每週有超過67萬以上的讀者。
- published: 10 Aug 2015
- views: 8
China - Talks with Taiwan
China and Taiwan are set to issue a document at the end of talks
this week which will underline both sides' commitment to avoiding
political rows, state media...
China and Taiwan are set to issue a document at the end of talks
this week which will underline both sides' commitment to avoiding
political rows, state media reports said on Thursday (3/2).
SHOWS:
BEIJING, CHINA 3/2
0.00 chiao given guided tour of joint venture milk powder
factory
0.03 chiao asking questions at factory
0.10 chiao walks through factory
0.15 delegates sit fown to talks in the state guest house
0.19 taiwanese and chinese team leaders shake hands
0.29 chiao and vice chairman of the chinese people's political
consultative conference wang zhao guo meet at great hall of
the people
0.35 ws of meeting room
0.41 pan from chiao to wang
0.46 vision ends
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/398a71ab0543b2c3e59109a56c6ae5f3
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/China Talks With Taiwan
China and Taiwan are set to issue a document at the end of talks
this week which will underline both sides' commitment to avoiding
political rows, state media reports said on Thursday (3/2).
SHOWS:
BEIJING, CHINA 3/2
0.00 chiao given guided tour of joint venture milk powder
factory
0.03 chiao asking questions at factory
0.10 chiao walks through factory
0.15 delegates sit fown to talks in the state guest house
0.19 taiwanese and chinese team leaders shake hands
0.29 chiao and vice chairman of the chinese people's political
consultative conference wang zhao guo meet at great hall of
the people
0.35 ws of meeting room
0.41 pan from chiao to wang
0.46 vision ends
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/398a71ab0543b2c3e59109a56c6ae5f3
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
TAIWAN: PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS: INDEPENDENCE ISSUE
English/Nat
Taiwan has begun voting for a new legislature in an election regarded by many as a referendum on the prospect of independence from China.
...
English/Nat
Taiwan has begun voting for a new legislature in an election regarded by many as a referendum on the prospect of independence from China.
The election comes amid rising tensions between Taiwan and China, which claims sovereignty over the island and is wary that democracy could prompt it to pursue a separatist course.
And the vote is likely to be closely watched by China for pointers to whether the pro-independence camp is gaining ground.
The question of independence for Taiwan is THE hot political issue - it's an idea that's firmly supported by some but emphatically rejected by others.
Should Taiwan be an independent nation or should it reunify with China?
The Democratic Progressive Party is for independence, but the ruling K-M-T (Kuomintang) and fledgling New Party are for unification, or so it would seem.
D-P-P legislator Shen Fu-Hsuing says that all sides are for independence in one form or another.
SOUNDBITE:
"They're all independent, they're all for independence in a sense. But the only difference is that we, as the major opposition party, the DPP, are for real, we are not only in deed, we are also advocating for independence. But the ruling party, deep in their heart, they want independence."
SUPER CAPTION: Shen Fu-Hsiung, DPP Legislator
From the way New Party leader and newspaper editor Alice Kao talks, it does sound like some sort of independence is desired.
SOUNDBITE:
"We would like to see the status quo maintained for another 20, 25 or 30 years, when the time comes, two sides can come around the table to talk about it, there's a commonwealth, there's a confederation, a form of all-Chinese territory, we'll provide some solution, confederation of Chinese, is like in British a Commonwealth."
SUPER CAPTION: Alice Kao, New Party legislator
Some argue that opinions divide along generational lines - young people who have only lived in a separate Taiwan have no Chinese identity.
But young or old, identification with China is not always the biggest factor in their opinion.
Fear of China is.
VOXPOPS:
"Because mainland China...forced us not to take that type of move, so if we take that now, we would have a kind of military risk."
"If China is not very friendly to us, I think we need to have some area, international society because right now, Taiwan is very isolated from all the other countries, and that's not fair for us."
Many independence opponents say that no matter who is supporting formal separation, they are a small minority.
SOUNDBITE:
"All the polling, all the preceding public polling, show that never over 20 percent of the people agree with the solution of an independent Taiwan, as the only solution for our future."
SUPER CAPTION: Alice Kao, New Party Legislator
Perhaps today's vote will give some indication as to whether that is true.
It may also reflect how successful China's programme of intimidation has been.
Several threats of military action have been reported in Taipei newspapers during the runup to balloting.
However, D-P-P leader Shen says that his party will continue to educate the Taiwanese people about the benefits of being an independent nation.
SOUNDBITE:
"We try to teach the people that although there may be some risk in the near term, but for your own safety, for your long-term security, I think that's the way to go."
SUPER CAPTION: Shen Fu-Hsiung - DPP legislator
Saturday's result promises to show just how quickly that lesson is being learned.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/bcc9219d202f9c58de81ffa8e3c94b30
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/Taiwan Parliamentary Elections Independence Issue
English/Nat
Taiwan has begun voting for a new legislature in an election regarded by many as a referendum on the prospect of independence from China.
The election comes amid rising tensions between Taiwan and China, which claims sovereignty over the island and is wary that democracy could prompt it to pursue a separatist course.
And the vote is likely to be closely watched by China for pointers to whether the pro-independence camp is gaining ground.
The question of independence for Taiwan is THE hot political issue - it's an idea that's firmly supported by some but emphatically rejected by others.
Should Taiwan be an independent nation or should it reunify with China?
The Democratic Progressive Party is for independence, but the ruling K-M-T (Kuomintang) and fledgling New Party are for unification, or so it would seem.
D-P-P legislator Shen Fu-Hsuing says that all sides are for independence in one form or another.
SOUNDBITE:
"They're all independent, they're all for independence in a sense. But the only difference is that we, as the major opposition party, the DPP, are for real, we are not only in deed, we are also advocating for independence. But the ruling party, deep in their heart, they want independence."
SUPER CAPTION: Shen Fu-Hsiung, DPP Legislator
From the way New Party leader and newspaper editor Alice Kao talks, it does sound like some sort of independence is desired.
SOUNDBITE:
"We would like to see the status quo maintained for another 20, 25 or 30 years, when the time comes, two sides can come around the table to talk about it, there's a commonwealth, there's a confederation, a form of all-Chinese territory, we'll provide some solution, confederation of Chinese, is like in British a Commonwealth."
SUPER CAPTION: Alice Kao, New Party legislator
Some argue that opinions divide along generational lines - young people who have only lived in a separate Taiwan have no Chinese identity.
But young or old, identification with China is not always the biggest factor in their opinion.
Fear of China is.
VOXPOPS:
"Because mainland China...forced us not to take that type of move, so if we take that now, we would have a kind of military risk."
"If China is not very friendly to us, I think we need to have some area, international society because right now, Taiwan is very isolated from all the other countries, and that's not fair for us."
Many independence opponents say that no matter who is supporting formal separation, they are a small minority.
SOUNDBITE:
"All the polling, all the preceding public polling, show that never over 20 percent of the people agree with the solution of an independent Taiwan, as the only solution for our future."
SUPER CAPTION: Alice Kao, New Party Legislator
Perhaps today's vote will give some indication as to whether that is true.
It may also reflect how successful China's programme of intimidation has been.
Several threats of military action have been reported in Taipei newspapers during the runup to balloting.
However, D-P-P leader Shen says that his party will continue to educate the Taiwanese people about the benefits of being an independent nation.
SOUNDBITE:
"We try to teach the people that although there may be some risk in the near term, but for your own safety, for your long-term security, I think that's the way to go."
SUPER CAPTION: Shen Fu-Hsiung - DPP legislator
Saturday's result promises to show just how quickly that lesson is being learned.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/bcc9219d202f9c58de81ffa8e3c94b30
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
China - Territorial Claims To Taiwan A Live Issue
T/I: 10:56:11 DSSA 10:20:40 DSSO
China said on Thursday (9/2) that a trade war with the United
States over intellectual property could be averted. Chin...
T/I: 10:56:11 DSSA 10:20:40 DSSO
China said on Thursday (9/2) that a trade war with the United
States over intellectual property could be averted. China's Foreign
Ministry spokesman Chen Jian also tackled Taiwan - .China has long
regarded Taiwan as a renegade province.=
SHOWS:
BEIJING, CHINA 9/2:
0.00 ws of presser with foreign ministry spokesman, chen jian
0.09 cutaway to cameras
0.12 back to ws
0.19 cu of chen jian speaking in mandarin saying china intends to
pursue the issue of re-unification with taiwan, but a
a peaceful solution is sought, based on taiwanese response as
to how to proceed
0.31 cutaway to ws of audience
0.34 back to chen jian
0.48 cutaway and pan up to ws of presser
0.58 ends
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/755c42c3da802c9bd9b765b66dce3a81
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/China Territorial Claims To Taiwan A Live Issue
T/I: 10:56:11 DSSA 10:20:40 DSSO
China said on Thursday (9/2) that a trade war with the United
States over intellectual property could be averted. China's Foreign
Ministry spokesman Chen Jian also tackled Taiwan - .China has long
regarded Taiwan as a renegade province.=
SHOWS:
BEIJING, CHINA 9/2:
0.00 ws of presser with foreign ministry spokesman, chen jian
0.09 cutaway to cameras
0.12 back to ws
0.19 cu of chen jian speaking in mandarin saying china intends to
pursue the issue of re-unification with taiwan, but a
a peaceful solution is sought, based on taiwanese response as
to how to proceed
0.31 cutaway to ws of audience
0.34 back to chen jian
0.48 cutaway and pan up to ws of presser
0.58 ends
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/755c42c3da802c9bd9b765b66dce3a81
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
USA: WASHINGTON: CONTROVERSY OVER VISA FOR TAIWAN PRESIDENT
English/Nat
The Chinese government has warned Washington not to issue a visa to the vice president of Taiwan, Li Yuan-zu.
But the State Department has sai...
English/Nat
The Chinese government has warned Washington not to issue a visa to the vice president of Taiwan, Li Yuan-zu.
But the State Department has said the visa won't influence U.S.-China relations.
Disputes over this issue have provoked sharp differences between China and the U.S. in recent years, and a new controversy now could threaten a recent thaw in relations.
The State Department spokesman made clear that the United States was under no obligation to consult with the Chinese before issuing visas to Taiwanese officials.
Nicholas Burns said visa decisions are for the United States to make on their own.
SOUNDBITE: (in English)
"It should not be a big deal for US-China relations and it should be seen for what it is. If this visa is issued and that is as the mere transit of an authority from Taiwan to the inauguration of a president in this hemisphere"
SUPER CAPTION: Nicholas Burns, State Department Spokesman
Taiwanese officials have said Vice President Li Yuan-zu will be traveling to Guatemala but is seeking a transit visa for the United States so his plane can refuel in the U.S.
China has sought to portray the visa in a political light.
SOUNDBITE: (in English)
"It certainly should not affect US-China relations. There's much more at stake here in the US-Chinese relations than the mere issuance of a transit visa if in fact that is what happens."
SUPER CAPTION: Nicholas Burns, State Department Spokesman
A similar confrontation arose in June 1995, when the visit to the U-S by Taiwan's President Lee Teng-hui caused tension between Washington and Beijing.
President Bill Clinton's decision to grant Lee a visa to attend his college reunion at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, outraged China, which viewed the move as a major shift in U-S policy.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/eccb1e7a218952d0bd3a0e5b008b0d7a
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/USA Washington Controversy Over Visa For Taiwan President
English/Nat
The Chinese government has warned Washington not to issue a visa to the vice president of Taiwan, Li Yuan-zu.
But the State Department has said the visa won't influence U.S.-China relations.
Disputes over this issue have provoked sharp differences between China and the U.S. in recent years, and a new controversy now could threaten a recent thaw in relations.
The State Department spokesman made clear that the United States was under no obligation to consult with the Chinese before issuing visas to Taiwanese officials.
Nicholas Burns said visa decisions are for the United States to make on their own.
SOUNDBITE: (in English)
"It should not be a big deal for US-China relations and it should be seen for what it is. If this visa is issued and that is as the mere transit of an authority from Taiwan to the inauguration of a president in this hemisphere"
SUPER CAPTION: Nicholas Burns, State Department Spokesman
Taiwanese officials have said Vice President Li Yuan-zu will be traveling to Guatemala but is seeking a transit visa for the United States so his plane can refuel in the U.S.
China has sought to portray the visa in a political light.
SOUNDBITE: (in English)
"It certainly should not affect US-China relations. There's much more at stake here in the US-Chinese relations than the mere issuance of a transit visa if in fact that is what happens."
SUPER CAPTION: Nicholas Burns, State Department Spokesman
A similar confrontation arose in June 1995, when the visit to the U-S by Taiwan's President Lee Teng-hui caused tension between Washington and Beijing.
President Bill Clinton's decision to grant Lee a visa to attend his college reunion at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, outraged China, which viewed the move as a major shift in U-S policy.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Taiwan to issue new passports with country's name on cover
Taipei, Taiwan, 30 August 2003
1. People filling out forms to apply for new passports
2. Various shots of people filling out forms
3. Mid shot of a man filli...
Taipei, Taiwan, 30 August 2003
1. People filling out forms to apply for new passports
2. Various shots of people filling out forms
3. Mid shot of a man filling out a form, checking a passport
4. Copies of the old passport (left) and the new one with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
5. Close up on a copy of new passport with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
Taipei, Taiwan, 29 August 2003
6. Wide of Foreign Ministry weekly press conference
7. SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin) Richard Shih, Foreign Ministry spokesman:
"We added 'Taiwan' on the cover of our passports to clear out confusion. When our citizens travel overseas, people would know that we are from Republic of China, Taiwan. Customs and airlines company staff around the world would not mistaken us as coming from People's Republic of China."
Taipei, Taiwan, 30 August 2003
9. Cutaway cameras
10. SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin) Liu The-hsiun, deputy chairman, Mainland Affairs Council:
"This move did not change any status, this is a statement of fact. Therefore I don't think it will cause any dispute between the two (Taiwan and China)."
11. Man collecting copies of passports
12. Man collecting passport
13. SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin) Ren Hu, Taipei resident:
"I applied early so I won't get a copy of new passport with 'Taiwan' on the cover. I don't want the new one. I think most people recognize Taiwan as a local government anyway."
14. Copy of new passport
STORYLINE:
Taiwan's Foreign Ministry risked angering Beijing on Monday when it issued a new passport with "Taiwan" written on its cover, a change officials said would prevent foreign immigration officers from mistaking Taiwanese travelers for citizens of the People's Republic of China.
The old passports only have the island's official name, "Republic of China," a name China and Taiwan shared before the Communist Party took over the mainland in 1949, causing Taiwan to break away and resist Beijing's rule.
The Communists renamed China as "The People's Republic of China."
Past Taiwanese governments had been reluctant to add "Taiwan" to passports because pro-unification Taiwanese and Chinese leaders had warned the move could be interpreted as a step toward a permanent split with the mainland.
China has long warned that it might use force to stop moves toward formal Taiwanese independence.
But many Taiwanese have complained that foreign immigration officers have mistaken them for citizens of China because their passport covers don't have "Taiwan" on them.
China criticized Taiwan's addition of the word "Taiwan" to its passport cover and urged other countries to back Beijing's claim of sovereignty over the self-governing island.
Pakistan warned last month that Taiwan's decision to change its passports will create new tensions with the island's biggest rival, China.
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wn.com/Taiwan To Issue New Passports With Country's Name On Cover
Taipei, Taiwan, 30 August 2003
1. People filling out forms to apply for new passports
2. Various shots of people filling out forms
3. Mid shot of a man filling out a form, checking a passport
4. Copies of the old passport (left) and the new one with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
5. Close up on a copy of new passport with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
Taipei, Taiwan, 29 August 2003
6. Wide of Foreign Ministry weekly press conference
7. SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin) Richard Shih, Foreign Ministry spokesman:
"We added 'Taiwan' on the cover of our passports to clear out confusion. When our citizens travel overseas, people would know that we are from Republic of China, Taiwan. Customs and airlines company staff around the world would not mistaken us as coming from People's Republic of China."
Taipei, Taiwan, 30 August 2003
9. Cutaway cameras
10. SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin) Liu The-hsiun, deputy chairman, Mainland Affairs Council:
"This move did not change any status, this is a statement of fact. Therefore I don't think it will cause any dispute between the two (Taiwan and China)."
11. Man collecting copies of passports
12. Man collecting passport
13. SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin) Ren Hu, Taipei resident:
"I applied early so I won't get a copy of new passport with 'Taiwan' on the cover. I don't want the new one. I think most people recognize Taiwan as a local government anyway."
14. Copy of new passport
STORYLINE:
Taiwan's Foreign Ministry risked angering Beijing on Monday when it issued a new passport with "Taiwan" written on its cover, a change officials said would prevent foreign immigration officers from mistaking Taiwanese travelers for citizens of the People's Republic of China.
The old passports only have the island's official name, "Republic of China," a name China and Taiwan shared before the Communist Party took over the mainland in 1949, causing Taiwan to break away and resist Beijing's rule.
The Communists renamed China as "The People's Republic of China."
Past Taiwanese governments had been reluctant to add "Taiwan" to passports because pro-unification Taiwanese and Chinese leaders had warned the move could be interpreted as a step toward a permanent split with the mainland.
China has long warned that it might use force to stop moves toward formal Taiwanese independence.
But many Taiwanese have complained that foreign immigration officers have mistaken them for citizens of China because their passport covers don't have "Taiwan" on them.
China criticized Taiwan's addition of the word "Taiwan" to its passport cover and urged other countries to back Beijing's claim of sovereignty over the self-governing island.
Pakistan warned last month that Taiwan's decision to change its passports will create new tensions with the island's biggest rival, China.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/6919214792120465522270c8a27c4702
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
VOICER Taiwan to issue passports with country's name on cover
VOICED BY KATHERINE BONNER
30 August 2003
00 00 People filling out forms to apply for new passports
00 05 Close up filling out forms checking his passpo...
VOICED BY KATHERINE BONNER
30 August 2003
00 00 People filling out forms to apply for new passports
00 05 Close up filling out forms checking his passport
00 10 Copies of the old passport (left) and the new one with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
00 15 Close up on a copy of new passport with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
00 20 Side shot people filling out forms
00 24 Wide shot in office with people applying for passports
29 August 2003
00 30 Wide of Foreign Ministry weekly press conference
00 38 Foreign Ministry spokesman, Richard Shih, speaking
30 August 2003
00 50 Close up copy of new passport
00 54 Ren Hu at counter collecting old-style passport
00 58 Man collecting old-style passport
STORYLINE:
Taiwan's Foreign Ministry issued its first new passports with "Taiwan" written on its cover on Monday.
Taiwan says the change is to stop foreign immigration officers from mistaking Taiwanese travellers for citizens of the People's Republic of China but stressed there were no other changes to the passport .
The move was criticised by Chinese leaders when it was announced, who said the island belongs to China and shouldn't try to act like an independent nation.
Several countries, including the United States and Japan, have said the change will not affect the movement of Taiwanese citizens in and out of their borders.
00 02 A small but determined group of Taiwanese applied for the new passports which, for the first time, have the word Taiwan on the cover .
00 11 The old passports just have Republic of China on them- the pre-Communist era name shared by China and Taiwan when they were both ruled by the Nationalist party.
00 21 The change to the passport is small - but the implications are much bigger.
00 26 The move angered China which regards Taiwan as a breakaway province that must be reunited with the mainland.
00 32 Taiwan said the change would help foreign customs officials tell the difference between Taiwanese and mainland Chinese travellers.
00 38 FX speaking
00 42 Taiwan's Foreign ministry spokesman, Richard Shih, said it was done "to clear confusion", and make it more convenient for Taiwanese people to travel overseas.
00 51 But the cosmetic change has not pleased everyone and this man was waiting to collect one of the last old passports without the controversial word Taiwan added to its cover.
ends 01 03
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wn.com/Voicer Taiwan To Issue Passports With Country's Name On Cover
VOICED BY KATHERINE BONNER
30 August 2003
00 00 People filling out forms to apply for new passports
00 05 Close up filling out forms checking his passport
00 10 Copies of the old passport (left) and the new one with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
00 15 Close up on a copy of new passport with 'Taiwan' printed on the cover
00 20 Side shot people filling out forms
00 24 Wide shot in office with people applying for passports
29 August 2003
00 30 Wide of Foreign Ministry weekly press conference
00 38 Foreign Ministry spokesman, Richard Shih, speaking
30 August 2003
00 50 Close up copy of new passport
00 54 Ren Hu at counter collecting old-style passport
00 58 Man collecting old-style passport
STORYLINE:
Taiwan's Foreign Ministry issued its first new passports with "Taiwan" written on its cover on Monday.
Taiwan says the change is to stop foreign immigration officers from mistaking Taiwanese travellers for citizens of the People's Republic of China but stressed there were no other changes to the passport .
The move was criticised by Chinese leaders when it was announced, who said the island belongs to China and shouldn't try to act like an independent nation.
Several countries, including the United States and Japan, have said the change will not affect the movement of Taiwanese citizens in and out of their borders.
00 02 A small but determined group of Taiwanese applied for the new passports which, for the first time, have the word Taiwan on the cover .
00 11 The old passports just have Republic of China on them- the pre-Communist era name shared by China and Taiwan when they were both ruled by the Nationalist party.
00 21 The change to the passport is small - but the implications are much bigger.
00 26 The move angered China which regards Taiwan as a breakaway province that must be reunited with the mainland.
00 32 Taiwan said the change would help foreign customs officials tell the difference between Taiwanese and mainland Chinese travellers.
00 38 FX speaking
00 42 Taiwan's Foreign ministry spokesman, Richard Shih, said it was done "to clear confusion", and make it more convenient for Taiwanese people to travel overseas.
00 51 But the cosmetic change has not pleased everyone and this man was waiting to collect one of the last old passports without the controversial word Taiwan added to its cover.
ends 01 03
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/759b707dbb4d49ab85353b01bd369345
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Taiwanese president announces ballot issue for controversial referendum
TAI REFERENDUM 160104N
Recent FILE - Taipei
1. Various shots of president Chen Shui-bian at campaign rallies
January 16, 2003, Taipei
2. SOUNDBITE (...
TAI REFERENDUM 160104N
Recent FILE - Taipei
1. Various shots of president Chen Shui-bian at campaign rallies
January 16, 2003, Taipei
2. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin), Chen Shui-bian, Taiwanese president:
"First of all, we will ask our citizens, Should mainland China refuse to withdraw the missiles it has targeted at Taiwan and to openly renounce the use of force against us, would you agree that the government should acquire more advanced anti-missile weapons to strengthen Taiwan's self-defense capabilities?"
Recent file, eastern Taiwan
3. Military exercise
January 16, 2003, Taipei, Taiwan
4. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin), Chen Shui-bian, Taiwan president:
"Meanwhile, we will ask 'would you agree that our government should engage in negotiation with Mainland China (PRC) on the establishment of a peace and stability framework for cross-strait interactions in order to build consensus and for the welfare of the peoples on both sides?"
Recent file, Taipei, Taiwan
5. Various shots of president Chen Shui-bian at campaign rallies
January 16, 2003, Taipei, Taiwan
6. SOUNDBITE, (Mandarin), Chen Shui-bian, Taiwan president
"We seek to with the shortest timeframe, invite China to appoint a representative to meet with our appointed envoy-mindful of the democratic
choice that has been made by the people of Taiwan- to commence negotiation on the establishment of a peace and stability framework for cross-strait interactions."
Recent file, Taipei, Taiwan
7. Various shots of Chen at campaign rallies
STORYLINE:
Taiwan's first islandwide referendum will ask voters whether Taiwan should buttress its anti-missile defences if China doesn't stop pointing hundreds of missiles at its shores, the president said on Friday, detailing the language of the ballot for the first time.
In a taped televised address, President Chen Shui-bian said the March 20 referendum also will ask voters whether Taiwan should proceed with peace talks with China, just 160 kilometers (100 miles) across the Taiwan Strait.
The referendum has worried China as well as Taiwan's most important ally, the United States.
Beijing fears it could set a precedent for a vote on whether Taiwan should seek full independence from China.
The two sides have been ruled separately since they split amid civil war in 1949.
Chinese leaders have threatened war if Taiwan refuses eventual unification, which Beijing considers a sacred goal.
On Friday, Chen said the March referendum ballot would read: "Should mainland China refuse to withdraw the missiles it has targeted at Taiwan and
to openly renounce the use of force against us, would you agree that the government should acquire more advanced anti-missile weapons to strengthen Taiwan's self-defense capabilities?"
He said that the second part would say: "Would you agree that our government should engage in negotiation with mainland China on the establishment of a peace and stability framework for cross-strait interactions in order to build consensus and for the welfare of the peoples on both sides?"
Washington has cautioned Taiwan against provoking China with referendums that might involve the touchy sovereignty issue.
American officials have tried to pressure the Taiwanese president to scuttle the referendum, fearing the vote could upset the delicate status quo in the Taiwan Strait.
However, Chen has insisted on holding it.
The referendum will be held on the same day as Taiwan's presidential election, in which Chen will be running.
His opponent in the race, former Vice President Lien Chan, has dismissed the referendum as a reckless ploy to draw more Chen supporters to the polls.
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wn.com/Taiwanese President Announces Ballot Issue For Controversial Referendum
TAI REFERENDUM 160104N
Recent FILE - Taipei
1. Various shots of president Chen Shui-bian at campaign rallies
January 16, 2003, Taipei
2. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin), Chen Shui-bian, Taiwanese president:
"First of all, we will ask our citizens, Should mainland China refuse to withdraw the missiles it has targeted at Taiwan and to openly renounce the use of force against us, would you agree that the government should acquire more advanced anti-missile weapons to strengthen Taiwan's self-defense capabilities?"
Recent file, eastern Taiwan
3. Military exercise
January 16, 2003, Taipei, Taiwan
4. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin), Chen Shui-bian, Taiwan president:
"Meanwhile, we will ask 'would you agree that our government should engage in negotiation with Mainland China (PRC) on the establishment of a peace and stability framework for cross-strait interactions in order to build consensus and for the welfare of the peoples on both sides?"
Recent file, Taipei, Taiwan
5. Various shots of president Chen Shui-bian at campaign rallies
January 16, 2003, Taipei, Taiwan
6. SOUNDBITE, (Mandarin), Chen Shui-bian, Taiwan president
"We seek to with the shortest timeframe, invite China to appoint a representative to meet with our appointed envoy-mindful of the democratic
choice that has been made by the people of Taiwan- to commence negotiation on the establishment of a peace and stability framework for cross-strait interactions."
Recent file, Taipei, Taiwan
7. Various shots of Chen at campaign rallies
STORYLINE:
Taiwan's first islandwide referendum will ask voters whether Taiwan should buttress its anti-missile defences if China doesn't stop pointing hundreds of missiles at its shores, the president said on Friday, detailing the language of the ballot for the first time.
In a taped televised address, President Chen Shui-bian said the March 20 referendum also will ask voters whether Taiwan should proceed with peace talks with China, just 160 kilometers (100 miles) across the Taiwan Strait.
The referendum has worried China as well as Taiwan's most important ally, the United States.
Beijing fears it could set a precedent for a vote on whether Taiwan should seek full independence from China.
The two sides have been ruled separately since they split amid civil war in 1949.
Chinese leaders have threatened war if Taiwan refuses eventual unification, which Beijing considers a sacred goal.
On Friday, Chen said the March referendum ballot would read: "Should mainland China refuse to withdraw the missiles it has targeted at Taiwan and
to openly renounce the use of force against us, would you agree that the government should acquire more advanced anti-missile weapons to strengthen Taiwan's self-defense capabilities?"
He said that the second part would say: "Would you agree that our government should engage in negotiation with mainland China on the establishment of a peace and stability framework for cross-strait interactions in order to build consensus and for the welfare of the peoples on both sides?"
Washington has cautioned Taiwan against provoking China with referendums that might involve the touchy sovereignty issue.
American officials have tried to pressure the Taiwanese president to scuttle the referendum, fearing the vote could upset the delicate status quo in the Taiwan Strait.
However, Chen has insisted on holding it.
The referendum will be held on the same day as Taiwan's presidential election, in which Chen will be running.
His opponent in the race, former Vice President Lien Chan, has dismissed the referendum as a reckless ploy to draw more Chen supporters to the polls.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
The Big Issue Taiwan Ltd.李取中(104年度新光人壽CSR講座)2015/07/06
透過 YouTube 影片記錄
<新光人壽CSR講座>
時間:2015/07/06(一)17:00-19:00
地點:新光人壽摩天大樓43樓
講題:<百元大誌>讓街友與社會企業雙贏
講師:李取中(大誌文創創辦人暨總編輯)
<青年世代的社會參與>Stay hungry, Stay foolish.愚人世代的社會參與〜...
透過 YouTube 影片記錄
<新光人壽CSR講座>
時間:2015/07/06(一)17:00-19:00
地點:新光人壽摩天大樓43樓
講題:<百元大誌>讓街友與社會企業雙贏
講師:李取中(大誌文創創辦人暨總編輯)
<青年世代的社會參與>Stay hungry, Stay foolish.愚人世代的社會參與〜一本社會企業雜誌的運作與發展
主動參與的精神:
一、與其伸手要,不如舉手賣
二、一本社會企業雜誌,一段改變遊民生活的歷程
三、創立就是為了賺錢〜賺改變社會的錢
公益的思想〜世代的歌頌:
一、社會企業販賣「產品」而非憐憫與同情
二、走在對的路上,莫忘初衷
<The Big Issue / 大誌雜誌 | 大智文創>
http://www.bigissue.tw/
wn.com/The Big Issue Taiwan Ltd.李取中(104年度新光人壽Csr講座)2015 07 06
透過 YouTube 影片記錄
<新光人壽CSR講座>
時間:2015/07/06(一)17:00-19:00
地點:新光人壽摩天大樓43樓
講題:<百元大誌>讓街友與社會企業雙贏
講師:李取中(大誌文創創辦人暨總編輯)
<青年世代的社會參與>Stay hungry, Stay foolish.愚人世代的社會參與〜一本社會企業雜誌的運作與發展
主動參與的精神:
一、與其伸手要,不如舉手賣
二、一本社會企業雜誌,一段改變遊民生活的歷程
三、創立就是為了賺錢〜賺改變社會的錢
公益的思想〜世代的歌頌:
一、社會企業販賣「產品」而非憐憫與同情
二、走在對的路上,莫忘初衷
<The Big Issue / 大誌雜誌 | 大智文創>
http://www.bigissue.tw/
- published: 07 Jul 2015
- views: 2
Taiwan status is an unsettled issue - 4
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the ...
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Taiwan Democracy Project
July 1, 2015 Wednesday 4:15pmGoldman Conference Room
4th Floor East Wing E409, Encina Hall
616 Serra Street, Stanford, California 94305
http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/tpp_and_taiwan_national_security_2015_06_29.pdf
Abstract:
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is widely regarded as the economic component of the US strategy of “rebalance” to Asia. As a major trading partner of many of the founding members, Taiwan has obvious economic and security interests at stake and is therefore seeking to join the TPP in the next round. But an overlooked aspect of the TPP for Taiwan is its potential impact on sovereignty. Trade agreements provide a revealing window into the evolving conceptions of modern sovereignty. The way Taiwan’s unique form of statehood and international status is defined in trade agreements could strengthen its position under international law and contribute to its national security. This talk will consider how Taiwan was defined as a sui generis legal entity in its application to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) and as a party to the Cross-Straits Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), with lessons for future negotiations to join the TPP.
Speaker Bio:
Joseph Yen-ching Chao is an Executive Officer in the Department of International Cooperation and Economic Affairs. A member of Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) diplomatic corps since 2005, he has previously served as a German-language interpreter for the Presidential Office, an officer in the Department of Treaty and Legal Affairs, and as a deputy secretary of Taiwan’s permanent mission to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. He holds an LL.M. from Ruprecht-Karls University in Heidelberg and a Doctor juris from Albert-Ludwige University, Frieberg, Germany. Dr. Chao is in residence at Stanford from May-July 2015, where his research examines Taiwan’s prospects for entry into the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
wn.com/Taiwan Status Is An Unsettled Issue 4
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Taiwan Democracy Project
July 1, 2015 Wednesday 4:15pmGoldman Conference Room
4th Floor East Wing E409, Encina Hall
616 Serra Street, Stanford, California 94305
http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/tpp_and_taiwan_national_security_2015_06_29.pdf
Abstract:
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is widely regarded as the economic component of the US strategy of “rebalance” to Asia. As a major trading partner of many of the founding members, Taiwan has obvious economic and security interests at stake and is therefore seeking to join the TPP in the next round. But an overlooked aspect of the TPP for Taiwan is its potential impact on sovereignty. Trade agreements provide a revealing window into the evolving conceptions of modern sovereignty. The way Taiwan’s unique form of statehood and international status is defined in trade agreements could strengthen its position under international law and contribute to its national security. This talk will consider how Taiwan was defined as a sui generis legal entity in its application to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) and as a party to the Cross-Straits Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), with lessons for future negotiations to join the TPP.
Speaker Bio:
Joseph Yen-ching Chao is an Executive Officer in the Department of International Cooperation and Economic Affairs. A member of Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) diplomatic corps since 2005, he has previously served as a German-language interpreter for the Presidential Office, an officer in the Department of Treaty and Legal Affairs, and as a deputy secretary of Taiwan’s permanent mission to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. He holds an LL.M. from Ruprecht-Karls University in Heidelberg and a Doctor juris from Albert-Ludwige University, Frieberg, Germany. Dr. Chao is in residence at Stanford from May-July 2015, where his research examines Taiwan’s prospects for entry into the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
- published: 06 Jul 2015
- views: 2
Why is TPP relevant to Taiwan's national security? - 3
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the ...
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Taiwan Democracy Project
July 1, 2015 Wednesday 4:15pmGoldman Conference Room
4th Floor East Wing E409, Encina Hall
616 Serra Street, Stanford, California 94305
http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/tpp_and_taiwan_national_security_2015_06_29.pdf
Abstract:
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is widely regarded as the economic component of the US strategy of “rebalance” to Asia. As a major trading partner of many of the founding members, Taiwan has obvious economic and security interests at stake and is therefore seeking to join the TPP in the next round. But an overlooked aspect of the TPP for Taiwan is its potential impact on sovereignty. Trade agreements provide a revealing window into the evolving conceptions of modern sovereignty. The way Taiwan’s unique form of statehood and international status is defined in trade agreements could strengthen its position under international law and contribute to its national security. This talk will consider how Taiwan was defined as a sui generis legal entity in its application to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) and as a party to the Cross-Straits Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), with lessons for future negotiations to join the TPP.
Speaker Bio:
Joseph Yen-ching Chao is an Executive Officer in the Department of International Cooperation and Economic Affairs. A member of Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) diplomatic corps since 2005, he has previously served as a German-language interpreter for the Presidential Office, an officer in the Department of Treaty and Legal Affairs, and as a deputy secretary of Taiwan’s permanent mission to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. He holds an LL.M. from Ruprecht-Karls University in Heidelberg and a Doctor juris from Albert-Ludwige University, Frieberg, Germany. Dr. Chao is in residence at Stanford from May-July 2015, where his research examines Taiwan’s prospects for entry into the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
wn.com/Why Is Tpp Relevant To Taiwan's National Security 3
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Taiwan Democracy Project
July 1, 2015 Wednesday 4:15pmGoldman Conference Room
4th Floor East Wing E409, Encina Hall
616 Serra Street, Stanford, California 94305
http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/tpp_and_taiwan_national_security_2015_06_29.pdf
Abstract:
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is widely regarded as the economic component of the US strategy of “rebalance” to Asia. As a major trading partner of many of the founding members, Taiwan has obvious economic and security interests at stake and is therefore seeking to join the TPP in the next round. But an overlooked aspect of the TPP for Taiwan is its potential impact on sovereignty. Trade agreements provide a revealing window into the evolving conceptions of modern sovereignty. The way Taiwan’s unique form of statehood and international status is defined in trade agreements could strengthen its position under international law and contribute to its national security. This talk will consider how Taiwan was defined as a sui generis legal entity in its application to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) and as a party to the Cross-Straits Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), with lessons for future negotiations to join the TPP.
Speaker Bio:
Joseph Yen-ching Chao is an Executive Officer in the Department of International Cooperation and Economic Affairs. A member of Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) diplomatic corps since 2005, he has previously served as a German-language interpreter for the Presidential Office, an officer in the Department of Treaty and Legal Affairs, and as a deputy secretary of Taiwan’s permanent mission to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. He holds an LL.M. from Ruprecht-Karls University in Heidelberg and a Doctor juris from Albert-Ludwige University, Frieberg, Germany. Dr. Chao is in residence at Stanford from May-July 2015, where his research examines Taiwan’s prospects for entry into the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
- published: 06 Jul 2015
- views: 2
Is int'l law Taiwan's enemy? - 1
1. What is the legal issue while China attack Taiwan?
2. WTO is the most important organizations Taiwan has now.
3. Legal status of Taiwan
4. GATT membership fo...
1. What is the legal issue while China attack Taiwan?
2. WTO is the most important organizations Taiwan has now.
3. Legal status of Taiwan
4. GATT membership for Taiwan
5. Taiwan and China are two separate & equal members in the int'l
organization
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Taiwan Democracy Project
July 1, 2015 Wednesday 4:15pmGoldman Conference Room
4th Floor East Wing E409, Encina Hall
616 Serra Street, Stanford, California 94305
http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/tpp_and_taiwan_national_security_2015_06_29.pdf
Abstract:
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is widely regarded as the economic component of the US strategy of “rebalance” to Asia. As a major trading partner of many of the founding members, Taiwan has obvious economic and security interests at stake and is therefore seeking to join the TPP in the next round. But an overlooked aspect of the TPP for Taiwan is its potential impact on sovereignty. Trade agreements provide a revealing window into the evolving conceptions of modern sovereignty. The way Taiwan’s unique form of statehood and international status is defined in trade agreements could strengthen its position under international law and contribute to its national security. This talk will consider how Taiwan was defined as a sui generis legal entity in its application to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) and as a party to the Cross-Straits Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), with lessons for future negotiations to join the TPP.
Speaker Bio:
Joseph Yen-ching Chao is an Executive Officer in the Department of International Cooperation and Economic Affairs. A member of Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) diplomatic corps since 2005, he has previously served as a German-language interpreter for the Presidential Office, an officer in the Department of Treaty and Legal Affairs, and as a deputy secretary of Taiwan’s permanent mission to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. He holds an LL.M. from Ruprecht-Karls University in Heidelberg and a Doctor juris from Albert-Ludwige University, Frieberg, Germany. Dr. Chao is in residence at Stanford from May-July 2015, where his research examines Taiwan’s prospects for entry into the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
wn.com/Is Int'l Law Taiwan's Enemy 1
1. What is the legal issue while China attack Taiwan?
2. WTO is the most important organizations Taiwan has now.
3. Legal status of Taiwan
4. GATT membership for Taiwan
5. Taiwan and China are two separate & equal members in the int'l
organization
Taiwan's national security and Trans-Pacific Partnership:
The international law dimension
Joseph Yen-ching Chao 趙彥清
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Taiwan Democracy Project
July 1, 2015 Wednesday 4:15pmGoldman Conference Room
4th Floor East Wing E409, Encina Hall
616 Serra Street, Stanford, California 94305
http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/tpp_and_taiwan_national_security_2015_06_29.pdf
Abstract:
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is widely regarded as the economic component of the US strategy of “rebalance” to Asia. As a major trading partner of many of the founding members, Taiwan has obvious economic and security interests at stake and is therefore seeking to join the TPP in the next round. But an overlooked aspect of the TPP for Taiwan is its potential impact on sovereignty. Trade agreements provide a revealing window into the evolving conceptions of modern sovereignty. The way Taiwan’s unique form of statehood and international status is defined in trade agreements could strengthen its position under international law and contribute to its national security. This talk will consider how Taiwan was defined as a sui generis legal entity in its application to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) and as a party to the Cross-Straits Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), with lessons for future negotiations to join the TPP.
Speaker Bio:
Joseph Yen-ching Chao is an Executive Officer in the Department of International Cooperation and Economic Affairs. A member of Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) diplomatic corps since 2005, he has previously served as a German-language interpreter for the Presidential Office, an officer in the Department of Treaty and Legal Affairs, and as a deputy secretary of Taiwan’s permanent mission to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. He holds an LL.M. from Ruprecht-Karls University in Heidelberg and a Doctor juris from Albert-Ludwige University, Frieberg, Germany. Dr. Chao is in residence at Stanford from May-July 2015, where his research examines Taiwan’s prospects for entry into the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
- published: 05 Jul 2015
- views: 2
Cha Seung Won — Elle (Taiwan) June Issue 2015
Cha Seung Won - Elle (Taiwan) June Issue ‘15...
Cha Seung Won - Elle (Taiwan) June Issue ‘15
wn.com/Cha Seung Won — Elle (Taiwan) June Issue 2015
Cha Seung Won - Elle (Taiwan) June Issue ‘15
- published: 10 Jun 2015
- views: 4
-
on taiwan nuke issue 2010
-
NNP Press Conference on the Taiwan Loan Issue
-
Mobile Horizons: Interactions Across the Taiwan Strait - Featured Speaker
Mobile Horizons: Interactions Across the Taiwan Strait Featured Speaker: Yan Xuetong, Tsinghua University, The Taiwan Issue and China-US Relations.
-
Pawn of the Pacific - Taiwan
March 2004 The issue of Taiwan's sovereignty has fuelled a Pacific Cold War. Both China and Taiwan stand accused of using bribery and political interference ...
-
Socket.io issue and solution - Node.js Taiwan Party 13
主題: Socket.io 在多人同時連線狀況下,有可能會發生的狀況,同時講解當實際搭配Apache, nginx 的時候,結合會遇到什麼的狀況。 主講人: Hinablue http://blog.hinablue.me/ Topic: Talk about Socket.io, how does peopl...
-
UCF On The Issues - China - Taiwan Relations
Minxin Pei, Ph.D., author of "China's Trapped Transition: The Limits of Developmental Autocracy" talks on "China-Taiwan Relations: The Next Step". (2010)
-
CLE LIVE: The China, taiwan conflict ——cross strait relations development
Welcome to our first online live show CLE LIVE. Where we will talk about the many things that are going on in China and the rest of the Asia; through current events, politics , culture, entertainment, and more.
In this show well be talking about the long time rivalry between China and Taiwan. Where we will first look back in history on how this whole thing started, what is going on now, and our t
-
Taiwan, Republic of China
Amazing DUST DEVIL it will SHOCK you!!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tkxl1qCG1Xw
if you like paranormal video check out this video:
1.Strange creatures found around the world :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=za2NTRtXQY0
2.Ghosts best video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZmb4pO2Sn0
3.Loch Ness Monester Sighing :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyzvfr2gEfo
4.9 Hikers Killed by Aliens - The Dy
-
Taiwan's Quest for Greater International Space - A Freeman Chair Report Rollout on Capitol Hill
The Freeman Chair in China Studies cordially invites you to the rollout of the report: "Taiwan's Quest for Greater Participation in the International Communi...
-
Face to Face with Dr Lung Ying-tai (Minister of Culture, Taiwan) at SOAS, University of London
This Centre of Taiwan Studies event was held on 22 February 2013 Find out more about the Centre of Taiwan Studies: http://www.soas.ac.uk/taiwanstudies/ Since...
-
Video: China-Taiwan-United States Relations: Part 1 of 2
9:00 AM Indroductory Remarks 9:15 AM Panel 1: Domestic Politics and Perspectives Thomas Mann Senior Fellow, Governance Studies, The Brookings Institution Eme...
-
Taiwan, Trade and Trans-Pacific Partnership
Taiwan is a member of APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation). Its economy would make it among the more developed in the now 12 country Trans-Pacific Partne...
-
Taiwan India Relations by Dr Joe Karackattu, SOAS, University of London
This lecture entitled "Taiwan India Relations" was given by Dr Joe Karackattu (SOAS Centenary Visiting Fellow and Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai) at...
-
China and Taiwan, a short history
A short history of the relationship between China and Taiwan and the first in a series both of territorial disputes in the East and Southeast Asia region and...
-
U.S. Taiwan Security Relations
CNAS hosted a public experts' discussion on "Evaluating the Security Environment 35 Years after the Taiwan Relations Act" with The Honorable Andrew Hsia, Dep...
-
China-Taiwan-United States Relations: Part 2 of 2
12:15 PM Lunch Keynote Address: An Update on U.S.-Taiwan Relations Raymond Burghardt Chairman of the Board, American Institute in Taiwan 1:45 Panel 3: Region...
-
Cobra’s Breakthrough Conference in Taiwan - Cheryl’s Notes - January 24 – 25, 2015
By Cobra & Cheryl Scott
Much thanks to Cheryl Scott for granting The Event Chronicle permission to publish her notes from Cobra’s recent Breakthrough Conference in Taiwan on January 24 – 25, 2015.
Breakthrough Conference
Jan 24-25, 2015
Taipei, Taiwan Conference Notes
by Cheryl Scott
www.2012portal.blogspot.com
and
www.tachyonis.org
-
Taiwan's Economic Place in the Pacific
In commemoration of the 35th Anniversary of the Taiwan Relations Act, The Heritage Foundation, in cooperation with the Taiwan Benevolent Association of Ameri...
-
Clayton Dube on the 2012 Taiwan Election: Process, Outcomes, and Implications
This presentation was part of a Jan. 20, 2012 USC US-China Institute symposium on the Taiwan election. For more information about the symposium, please visit...
-
【全程影音】Running Man宋智孝來台 甜美笑容不停/song ji hyo in Taiwan
快訂閱必Po TV直播LIVE!更多「星」聞第一手知道喔~
必Po TV臉書粉絲團→ https://www.facebook.com/bepotv/ ←快按讚分享喔
南韓知名藝人宋智孝在「Running Man」中展現真性情,因此在亞洲地區擁有超高人氣。同時也被譽為南韓「自然系美人」,她今天特地來台,為代言的韓系美妝產品舉行揭幕儀式。
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Taiwan's Expansion of International Space: Opportunities and Challenges, SOAS, University of London
This special lecture by Professor Lee Wei-chin (Wake Forest University) entitled "Taiwan's Expansion of International Space: Opportunities and Challenges" wa...
Mobile Horizons: Interactions Across the Taiwan Strait - Featured Speaker
Mobile Horizons: Interactions Across the Taiwan Strait Featured Speaker: Yan Xuetong, Tsinghua University, The Taiwan Issue and China-US Relations....
Mobile Horizons: Interactions Across the Taiwan Strait Featured Speaker: Yan Xuetong, Tsinghua University, The Taiwan Issue and China-US Relations.
wn.com/Mobile Horizons Interactions Across The Taiwan Strait Featured Speaker
Mobile Horizons: Interactions Across the Taiwan Strait Featured Speaker: Yan Xuetong, Tsinghua University, The Taiwan Issue and China-US Relations.
Pawn of the Pacific - Taiwan
March 2004 The issue of Taiwan's sovereignty has fuelled a Pacific Cold War. Both China and Taiwan stand accused of using bribery and political interference ......
March 2004 The issue of Taiwan's sovereignty has fuelled a Pacific Cold War. Both China and Taiwan stand accused of using bribery and political interference ...
wn.com/Pawn Of The Pacific Taiwan
March 2004 The issue of Taiwan's sovereignty has fuelled a Pacific Cold War. Both China and Taiwan stand accused of using bribery and political interference ...
Socket.io issue and solution - Node.js Taiwan Party 13
主題: Socket.io 在多人同時連線狀況下,有可能會發生的狀況,同時講解當實際搭配Apache, nginx 的時候,結合會遇到什麼的狀況。 主講人: Hinablue http://blog.hinablue.me/ Topic: Talk about Socket.io, how does peopl......
主題: Socket.io 在多人同時連線狀況下,有可能會發生的狀況,同時講解當實際搭配Apache, nginx 的時候,結合會遇到什麼的狀況。 主講人: Hinablue http://blog.hinablue.me/ Topic: Talk about Socket.io, how does peopl...
wn.com/Socket.Io Issue And Solution Node.Js Taiwan Party 13
主題: Socket.io 在多人同時連線狀況下,有可能會發生的狀況,同時講解當實際搭配Apache, nginx 的時候,結合會遇到什麼的狀況。 主講人: Hinablue http://blog.hinablue.me/ Topic: Talk about Socket.io, how does peopl...
UCF On The Issues - China - Taiwan Relations
Minxin Pei, Ph.D., author of "China's Trapped Transition: The Limits of Developmental Autocracy" talks on "China-Taiwan Relations: The Next Step". (2010)...
Minxin Pei, Ph.D., author of "China's Trapped Transition: The Limits of Developmental Autocracy" talks on "China-Taiwan Relations: The Next Step". (2010)
wn.com/Ucf On The Issues China Taiwan Relations
Minxin Pei, Ph.D., author of "China's Trapped Transition: The Limits of Developmental Autocracy" talks on "China-Taiwan Relations: The Next Step". (2010)
- published: 23 Mar 2010
- views: 714
-
author: UCF
CLE LIVE: The China, taiwan conflict ——cross strait relations development
Welcome to our first online live show CLE LIVE. Where we will talk about the many things that are going on in China and the rest of the Asia; through current ev...
Welcome to our first online live show CLE LIVE. Where we will talk about the many things that are going on in China and the rest of the Asia; through current events, politics , culture, entertainment, and more.
In this show well be talking about the long time rivalry between China and Taiwan. Where we will first look back in history on how this whole thing started, what is going on now, and our thoughts on who we think is right on this issue.
Finally, during the show we will be answering many question you may have about this issue during the broadcast. So if you have any questions or thoughts you would like to share then submit them into the text box and well answer as many as we can.
wn.com/Cle Live The China, Taiwan Conflict ——Cross Strait Relations Development
Welcome to our first online live show CLE LIVE. Where we will talk about the many things that are going on in China and the rest of the Asia; through current events, politics , culture, entertainment, and more.
In this show well be talking about the long time rivalry between China and Taiwan. Where we will first look back in history on how this whole thing started, what is going on now, and our thoughts on who we think is right on this issue.
Finally, during the show we will be answering many question you may have about this issue during the broadcast. So if you have any questions or thoughts you would like to share then submit them into the text box and well answer as many as we can.
- published: 06 Nov 2015
- views: 0
Taiwan, Republic of China
Amazing DUST DEVIL it will SHOCK you!!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tkxl1qCG1Xw
if you like paranormal video check out this video:
1.Strange creatures found...
Amazing DUST DEVIL it will SHOCK you!!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tkxl1qCG1Xw
if you like paranormal video check out this video:
1.Strange creatures found around the world :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=za2NTRtXQY0
2.Ghosts best video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZmb4pO2Sn0
3.Loch Ness Monester Sighing :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyzvfr2gEfo
4.9 Hikers Killed by Aliens - The Dyatlov | Pass incident
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FvUlpuaPxk
5.Michael Jackson is NOT dead, still alive :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvJidrmfwac
6.BIGFOOT New Best Videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ls5dFvO5FJI
AMAZING STREET ART:
1.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUxqkmj_kzw&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=2
2.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3UyYEzIJ8w&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=3
3.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-ZdXRO8Tto&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=3
4.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3fKQVwzLnA&index;=4&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB
5.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHYIZMeLUA4&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=5
6.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uwIlvVUo6yM&index;=6&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB
7.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xDhml2DHQQ&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=7
8.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bguIW7YKOdE&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=8
9.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dicQLqjkbVw&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=9
10.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIgVhH4bt4c&index;=10&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB
wn.com/Taiwan, Republic Of China
Amazing DUST DEVIL it will SHOCK you!!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tkxl1qCG1Xw
if you like paranormal video check out this video:
1.Strange creatures found around the world :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=za2NTRtXQY0
2.Ghosts best video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZmb4pO2Sn0
3.Loch Ness Monester Sighing :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyzvfr2gEfo
4.9 Hikers Killed by Aliens - The Dyatlov | Pass incident
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FvUlpuaPxk
5.Michael Jackson is NOT dead, still alive :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvJidrmfwac
6.BIGFOOT New Best Videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ls5dFvO5FJI
AMAZING STREET ART:
1.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUxqkmj_kzw&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=2
2.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3UyYEzIJ8w&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=3
3.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-ZdXRO8Tto&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=3
4.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3fKQVwzLnA&index;=4&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB
5.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHYIZMeLUA4&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=5
6.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uwIlvVUo6yM&index;=6&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB
7.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xDhml2DHQQ&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=7
8.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bguIW7YKOdE&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=8
9.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dicQLqjkbVw&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB&index;=9
10.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIgVhH4bt4c&index;=10&list;=PLLskT7673N8EbunzQdQOT4Rxy234ox6iB
- published: 11 Oct 2014
- views: 1
Taiwan's Quest for Greater International Space - A Freeman Chair Report Rollout on Capitol Hill
The Freeman Chair in China Studies cordially invites you to the rollout of the report: "Taiwan's Quest for Greater Participation in the International Communi......
The Freeman Chair in China Studies cordially invites you to the rollout of the report: "Taiwan's Quest for Greater Participation in the International Communi...
wn.com/Taiwan's Quest For Greater International Space A Freeman Chair Report Rollout On Capitol Hill
The Freeman Chair in China Studies cordially invites you to the rollout of the report: "Taiwan's Quest for Greater Participation in the International Communi...
Face to Face with Dr Lung Ying-tai (Minister of Culture, Taiwan) at SOAS, University of London
This Centre of Taiwan Studies event was held on 22 February 2013 Find out more about the Centre of Taiwan Studies: http://www.soas.ac.uk/taiwanstudies/ Since......
This Centre of Taiwan Studies event was held on 22 February 2013 Find out more about the Centre of Taiwan Studies: http://www.soas.ac.uk/taiwanstudies/ Since...
wn.com/Face To Face With Dr Lung Ying Tai (Minister Of Culture, Taiwan) At Soas, University Of London
This Centre of Taiwan Studies event was held on 22 February 2013 Find out more about the Centre of Taiwan Studies: http://www.soas.ac.uk/taiwanstudies/ Since...
Video: China-Taiwan-United States Relations: Part 1 of 2
9:00 AM Indroductory Remarks 9:15 AM Panel 1: Domestic Politics and Perspectives Thomas Mann Senior Fellow, Governance Studies, The Brookings Institution Eme......
9:00 AM Indroductory Remarks 9:15 AM Panel 1: Domestic Politics and Perspectives Thomas Mann Senior Fellow, Governance Studies, The Brookings Institution Eme...
wn.com/Video China Taiwan United States Relations Part 1 Of 2
9:00 AM Indroductory Remarks 9:15 AM Panel 1: Domestic Politics and Perspectives Thomas Mann Senior Fellow, Governance Studies, The Brookings Institution Eme...
Taiwan, Trade and Trans-Pacific Partnership
Taiwan is a member of APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation). Its economy would make it among the more developed in the now 12 country Trans-Pacific Partne......
Taiwan is a member of APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation). Its economy would make it among the more developed in the now 12 country Trans-Pacific Partne...
wn.com/Taiwan, Trade And Trans Pacific Partnership
Taiwan is a member of APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation). Its economy would make it among the more developed in the now 12 country Trans-Pacific Partne...
Taiwan India Relations by Dr Joe Karackattu, SOAS, University of London
This lecture entitled "Taiwan India Relations" was given by Dr Joe Karackattu (SOAS Centenary Visiting Fellow and Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai) at......
This lecture entitled "Taiwan India Relations" was given by Dr Joe Karackattu (SOAS Centenary Visiting Fellow and Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai) at...
wn.com/Taiwan India Relations By Dr Joe Karackattu, Soas, University Of London
This lecture entitled "Taiwan India Relations" was given by Dr Joe Karackattu (SOAS Centenary Visiting Fellow and Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai) at...
China and Taiwan, a short history
A short history of the relationship between China and Taiwan and the first in a series both of territorial disputes in the East and Southeast Asia region and......
A short history of the relationship between China and Taiwan and the first in a series both of territorial disputes in the East and Southeast Asia region and...
wn.com/China And Taiwan, A Short History
A short history of the relationship between China and Taiwan and the first in a series both of territorial disputes in the East and Southeast Asia region and...
U.S. Taiwan Security Relations
CNAS hosted a public experts' discussion on "Evaluating the Security Environment 35 Years after the Taiwan Relations Act" with The Honorable Andrew Hsia, Dep......
CNAS hosted a public experts' discussion on "Evaluating the Security Environment 35 Years after the Taiwan Relations Act" with The Honorable Andrew Hsia, Dep...
wn.com/U.S. Taiwan Security Relations
CNAS hosted a public experts' discussion on "Evaluating the Security Environment 35 Years after the Taiwan Relations Act" with The Honorable Andrew Hsia, Dep...
China-Taiwan-United States Relations: Part 2 of 2
12:15 PM Lunch Keynote Address: An Update on U.S.-Taiwan Relations Raymond Burghardt Chairman of the Board, American Institute in Taiwan 1:45 Panel 3: Region......
12:15 PM Lunch Keynote Address: An Update on U.S.-Taiwan Relations Raymond Burghardt Chairman of the Board, American Institute in Taiwan 1:45 Panel 3: Region...
wn.com/China Taiwan United States Relations Part 2 Of 2
12:15 PM Lunch Keynote Address: An Update on U.S.-Taiwan Relations Raymond Burghardt Chairman of the Board, American Institute in Taiwan 1:45 Panel 3: Region...
Cobra’s Breakthrough Conference in Taiwan - Cheryl’s Notes - January 24 – 25, 2015
By Cobra & Cheryl Scott
Much thanks to Cheryl Scott for granting The Event Chronicle permission to publish her notes from Cobra’s recent Breakthrough Conferenc...
By Cobra & Cheryl Scott
Much thanks to Cheryl Scott for granting The Event Chronicle permission to publish her notes from Cobra’s recent Breakthrough Conference in Taiwan on January 24 – 25, 2015.
Breakthrough Conference
Jan 24-25, 2015
Taipei, Taiwan Conference Notes
by Cheryl Scott
www.2012portal.blogspot.com
and
www.tachyonis.org
wn.com/Cobra’S Breakthrough Conference In Taiwan Cheryl’S Notes January 24 – 25, 2015
By Cobra & Cheryl Scott
Much thanks to Cheryl Scott for granting The Event Chronicle permission to publish her notes from Cobra’s recent Breakthrough Conference in Taiwan on January 24 – 25, 2015.
Breakthrough Conference
Jan 24-25, 2015
Taipei, Taiwan Conference Notes
by Cheryl Scott
www.2012portal.blogspot.com
and
www.tachyonis.org
- published: 08 Feb 2015
- views: 771
Taiwan's Economic Place in the Pacific
In commemoration of the 35th Anniversary of the Taiwan Relations Act, The Heritage Foundation, in cooperation with the Taiwan Benevolent Association of Ameri......
In commemoration of the 35th Anniversary of the Taiwan Relations Act, The Heritage Foundation, in cooperation with the Taiwan Benevolent Association of Ameri...
wn.com/Taiwan's Economic Place In The Pacific
In commemoration of the 35th Anniversary of the Taiwan Relations Act, The Heritage Foundation, in cooperation with the Taiwan Benevolent Association of Ameri...
Clayton Dube on the 2012 Taiwan Election: Process, Outcomes, and Implications
This presentation was part of a Jan. 20, 2012 USC US-China Institute symposium on the Taiwan election. For more information about the symposium, please visit......
This presentation was part of a Jan. 20, 2012 USC US-China Institute symposium on the Taiwan election. For more information about the symposium, please visit...
wn.com/Clayton Dube On The 2012 Taiwan Election Process, Outcomes, And Implications
This presentation was part of a Jan. 20, 2012 USC US-China Institute symposium on the Taiwan election. For more information about the symposium, please visit...
【全程影音】Running Man宋智孝來台 甜美笑容不停/song ji hyo in Taiwan
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必Po TV臉書粉絲團→ https://www.facebook.com/bepotv/ ←快按讚分享喔
南韓知名藝人宋智孝在「Running Man」中展現真性情,因此在亞洲地區擁有超高人氣。同時也被譽為南韓「自然系美人」,她今天特地來台,為代言的韓系...
快訂閱必Po TV直播LIVE!更多「星」聞第一手知道喔~
必Po TV臉書粉絲團→ https://www.facebook.com/bepotv/ ←快按讚分享喔
南韓知名藝人宋智孝在「Running Man」中展現真性情,因此在亞洲地區擁有超高人氣。同時也被譽為南韓「自然系美人」,她今天特地來台,為代言的韓系美妝產品舉行揭幕儀式。
wn.com/【全程影音】Running Man宋智孝來台 甜美笑容不停 Song Ji Hyo In Taiwan
快訂閱必Po TV直播LIVE!更多「星」聞第一手知道喔~
必Po TV臉書粉絲團→ https://www.facebook.com/bepotv/ ←快按讚分享喔
南韓知名藝人宋智孝在「Running Man」中展現真性情,因此在亞洲地區擁有超高人氣。同時也被譽為南韓「自然系美人」,她今天特地來台,為代言的韓系美妝產品舉行揭幕儀式。
- published: 23 Dec 2015
- views: 9936
Taiwan's Expansion of International Space: Opportunities and Challenges, SOAS, University of London
This special lecture by Professor Lee Wei-chin (Wake Forest University) entitled "Taiwan's Expansion of International Space: Opportunities and Challenges" wa......
This special lecture by Professor Lee Wei-chin (Wake Forest University) entitled "Taiwan's Expansion of International Space: Opportunities and Challenges" wa...
wn.com/Taiwan's Expansion Of International Space Opportunities And Challenges, Soas, University Of London
This special lecture by Professor Lee Wei-chin (Wake Forest University) entitled "Taiwan's Expansion of International Space: Opportunities and Challenges" wa...