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Taipei Times


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# Article Title Author Hits
1961 Ma still confusing values and action Taipei Times Editorial 728
1962 Ukraine’s regrets now Taiwan’s frustration Kengchi Goah 吳耿志 740
1963 Exploiting the name of Taiwan Taipei Times Editorial 705
1964 Stickers will not put out the flames Taipei Times Editorial 677
1965 New history textbook fuels debate over biases Chu Ping-yi 祝平一 696
1966 Tyranny undermining rule of law Lai Chung-chiang 賴中強 754
1967 Time for a meaningful rights body Taipei Times Editorial 666
1968 The only loser in the mess is Ma Ying-jeou James Wang 王景弘 664
1969 Ma must stop using the law as a weapon Chu Ping-tzu 祝平次 705
1970 Implications of sunflowers for Beijing Taipei Times Editorial 685
1971 Sunflowers melt the hearts of elders Taipei Times Editorial 767
1972 Lessons learnt as siege ends Taipei Times Editorial 668
1973 Sunflowers bloom; dictators dig in Liberty Times Editorial 659
1974 Pact laced with China’s ambitions Eric Chiou 邱奕宏 739
1975 Signing of trade pact not imperative Taipei Times Editorial 691
1976 Roots of repression lie in Ma’s family line James Wang 王景弘 693
1977 Pro-China forces in Taiwan a real threat Chang Bing-yang 張炳陽 731
1978 Premier takes Goebbels’ advice Taipei Times Editorial 693
1979 Ma abuses Taiwan’s special status Chris Huang 黃居正 705
1980 The older generation could learn from young Huang Tien-lin 黃天麟 682
 
Page 99 of 145

Newsflash

A “leaked” internal memo from the WHO made public yesterday raised new questions about Taiwan’s participation in the International Health Regulations (IHR).

The memo, handed out by Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Kuan Bi-ling (管碧玲), states: “Taiwan, as a province of China, cannot be party to the IHR” — an agreement that dovetails with Beijing’s position.

World Health Assembly (WHA) Resolution 25.1, referring to the 1972 clause that ejected Taiwan’s representatives to the WHO, remains a “touchstone for such matters,” the confidential document said.