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Taipei Times


Title Filter     Display # 
# Article Title Author Hits
721 Time to rethink trash collection Taipei Times Editorial 329
722 Witch hunts hindering contact tracing Lin Shu-heng 林書珩 311
723 Taiwan must choose war or peace Simon Tang 湯先鈍 303
724 Vaccines vital to national security Joly Lin 林喬立 334
725 Securing a worldwide COVID-19 recovery Jenny Bloomfield 露珍怡 322
726 CCP’s vaccine propaganda drive Taipei Times Editorial 324
727 Biden must have a clear message Joseph Bosco 303
728 Stabilizing power by dispersing risk Taipei Times Editorial 349
729 Taiwan and the ghosts of history Ian Buruma 302
730 Taiwan can help; so should India Sana Hashmi 340
731 Addressing the PLA’s new tactics Lu Li-shih 呂禮詩 378
732 Ma keeps on parroting Beijing’s propaganda Liou Je-wei 劉哲瑋 306
733 Warning issued after 7 new local cases Taipei Times 311
734 Little coverage on Taiwan in West Ashley Rindsberg 323
735 Nuclear plants a big security risk Henry Sokolski 299
736 Unambiguity a must against China Taipei Times Editorial 314
737 Beware Beijing’s climate trap Taipei Times Editorial 354
738 US should send shots to Taiwan Thomas Shattuck 408
739 Japan should stand stronger with US Joseph Bosco 411
740 Taiwan’s secrets require guarding Taipei Times Editorial 444
 
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Newsflash


Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) caucus whip Wu Yu-sheng, front right, holds up a sign that says “against” while Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) legislators hold up signs that say the KMT is cheating the people during a legislative session in which the DPP proposed amendments to media laws.
Photo: CNA

Amendments designed to prevent media monopolization and investors from interfering in the editorial content of broadcasting corporations were put on hold yesterday after the government made a last-minute U-turn late on Thursday night, with Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) lawmakers backtracking from their previously declared support for the amendments and voting them down.

At the plenary session yesterday, the third-last day before the legislature goes into recess on Tuesday, the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and Taiwan Solidarity Union pressed for the amendments to clear the legislature.