Taiwan Tati Cultural and Educational Foundation

 
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1761 2011-02-20 Holy Mountain - Plant Flowers along Trail Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 901
1762 2011-02-19 Jigme Norbu Memorial Ceremony at Taipei Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 1719
1763 2011-02-19 Holy Mountain - Delicious Afternoon Tea and A Sumptuous Dinner Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 862
1764 2011-02-18 Mailing Preparation for Tati Journal No. 34 - Part3 Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 538
1765 2011-02-18 Memorial Reopen, A Falsification of 228 History Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 544
1766 2011-02-17 Mailing Preparation for Tati Journal No. 34 - Part2 Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 582
1767 2011-02-18 Protest for Former First Lady Wu Shu-jen Injustice Treatment Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 646
1768 2011-02-16 Taiwan National Liberation Movement Seminar Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 570
1769 2011-02-13 Nonstop Holy Mountain Pilgrimage Movement Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 586
1770 2011-02-12 2011 Holy Mountain - Spring Pollination!!! Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 802
 
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Newsflash


Former Examination Yuan president Yao Chia-wen, center, and Taiwan Society chairman Chang Yen-hsien, right, listen as Sim Kiantek speaks yesterday at a press conference in Taipei on interpreting the Cairo Declaration.
Photo: Wang Min-wei, Taipei Times

President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) interpretation of the Cairo Declaration, issued on Dec. 1, 1943, as the legal basis of Taiwan’s “return” to the Republic of China (ROC) after World War II was not only incorrect, but also dangerous because his rhetoric was exactly the same as that of Beijing, pro-independence advocates said yesterday.

“[Ma’s interpretation] fits right in with the ‘one China’ framework, which would be interpreted by the international community as saying Taiwan is part of China because hardly anyone would recognize the China in ‘one China’ framework as referring to the ROC,” Taiwan Society President Chang Yen-hsien (張炎憲), a former president of the Academia Historica, told a press conference.