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Taipei Times


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# Article Title Author Hits
81 Taiwan’s status isn’t undetermined Sim Kiantek 沈建德 323
82 Remarks by Wu Sz-huai on martial law ironic Fang Ping-sheng 方屏生 227
83 What al-Assad fall means for China Yang Chung-hsin 楊宗新 212
84 Muddling the word ‘sovereignty’ Simon Tang 湯先鈍 237
85 The thieves crying ‘stop thief’ Taipei Times Editorial 245
86 Forum reveals KMT hypocrisy Jethro Wang 王濬 210
87 Lai garnering regional support Taipei Times 203
88 A question of loyalty to the nation Chu Meng-hsiang 朱孟庠 265
89 Daring to remember Taiwan’s past Wei Hsin-chi 魏新奇 213
90 A Coming South China Sea Crisis? Michael Mazza 191
91 Taiwan, the schizophrenic nation Taipei Times Editorial 256
92 Allegiance and ‘our China’ rhetoric Taipei Times Editorial 224
93 Building solidarity in the military Chen Chi-nung 陳啟濃 332
94 The Gordian knot of nationality Yu Ying-fu 尤英夫 294
95 Tackling Trump’s Taiwan strategy Michael Lin 林正二 224
96 University lacking in academic integrity Mike Chang 張昭仁 265
97 Constitutional system under attack Chen Chi-nung 陳啟濃 230
98 Chinese chip access headache Taipei Times Editorial 241
99 Stop the legislative obstruction Michael Lin 林正二 249
100 How to end legislature’s gridlock Tommy Lin 林逸民 234
 
Page 5 of 145

Newsflash


Leaders of student groups and other activists hold a press conference at the Legislative Yuan in Taipei yesterday to announce plans for an event outside the legislature compound tomorrow evening to mark the one-year anniversary of the signing of the cross-strait service trade agreement.
Photo: Chu Pei-hsiung, Taipei Times

Several student groups are planning to mark the one-year anniversary of the signing of the cross-strait service trade agreement with an event aimed at warning the government against another attempt to push through controversial bills during the Legislative Yuan’s current extra session.

The service trade agreement was signed in Shanghai on June 21 last year.

The deal had sparked strong objections even before the pact was signed and eventually led to a three-week occupation of the legislature’s main chamber earlier this year after the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) tried to rush the pact through the review process.