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Taipei Times


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# Article Title Author Hits
2201 Defending freedom of speech Taipei Times Editorial 621
2202 A crisis for everyone but Ma Taipei Times Editorial 580
2203 China tunes in airwave propaganda Taipei Times Editorial 682
2204 An about-face, but no apology Taipei Times Editorial 591
2205 Useful toe treading by Taiwan? J. Michael Cole 寇謐將 576
2206 Our reluctant commander-in-chief Taipei Times Editorial 653
2207 Empty words on human rights? Taipei Times Editorial 623
2208 Locks alone won’t keep hope alive Taipei Times Editorial 671
2209 Unraveling the mystery of Taiwan’s constitution Bo Tedards 639
2210 The ‘China dream’ may become a nightmare Huang Tien-lin 黃天麟 712
2211 Knowingly walking right into a trap Taipei Times Editorial 634
2212 The ‘crimes’ of Nixon pale against those of Ma James Wang 王景弘 623
2213 Remembering the Tibetans’ plight Taipei Times Editorial 738
2214 Ma administration’s foul-ups mount Taipei Times Editorial 672
2215 A fuller perspective on 228 needed Jolan Hsieh 謝若蘭 729
2216 Learning from others’ food safety mistakes Warren Kuo 郭華仁 679
2217 Taiwan has to move on toward true democracy Nat Bellocchi 白樂崎 707
2218 Peace Prize for Ma? Let’s be serious J. Michael Cole 寇謐將 658
2219 China and US cannot co-manage Taiwan Winston Dang 陳重信 602
2220 Burgy has come back, with a major beef Joe Doufu 醜豆腐 620
 
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Newsflash

The Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU) yesterday filed an administrative lawsuit over the rejection by government agencies of its application to hold a referendum on a cross-strait trade pact, saying that the government’s current referendum proposal on a nuclear power plant adopted the same rationale as the TSU’s rejected initiative.

If President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) administration, which supports the construction of the Fourth Nuclear Power Plant, was allowed to ask people if they support the suspension of the construction of the plant in a planned national referendum, the TSU proposal should not have been rejected for asking a question that was inconsistent with the proposer’s position, TSU Chairman Huang Kun-huei (黃昆輝) said after filing the lawsuit at the Taipei High Administrative Court.