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Taipei Times


Title Filter     Display # 
# Article Title Author Hits
981 Reclaiming ‘one China’ narrative Dai Kee Liu 521
982 Polls are not Han’s concern; it is money Chen Mao-hsiung 陳茂雄 499
983 The Formosa Incident: a look back Gerrit Van Der Wees 510
984 Taiwan the right choice for helping the US Navy Yang Chung-hsin 楊宗新 480
985 Hong Kong: The world is watching Taipei Times Editorial 505
986 Politicians sink to a new low Taipei Times Editorial 469
987 Pro-China parties must be rejected Paul Lin 林保華 506
988 KMT in a panic over ‘spy’ allegations Taipei Times Editorial 540
989 US Army should choose Taiwan Grant Newsham 486
990 Beware tiger, mice can roar Taipei Times Editorial 545
991 HK at the front of a new Cold War Wir fur Hongkong 462
992 Democrats must stand up to China Gray Sergeant 501
993 US port calls benefit Taiwan Taipei Times Editorial 459
994 Reading between the lines Taipei Times Editorial 508
995 Slavery on China’s plantations Taipei Times Editorial 449
996 All languages equally important Taipei Times 472
997 Taiwan’s economy on the upswing Taipei Times Editorial 470
998 US and Australia too late on Pacific Bill Sharp 512
999 Czechs turn PRC game against it Joseph Bosco 471
1000 Beijing’s latest bid to lure voters Taipei Times Editorial 477
 
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Newsflash

Impatient with the Council of Indigenous Peoples’ (CIP) response to Pingpu Aborigines’ demand for recognition, activist Lin Sheng-yi (林勝義), a Pingpu from the Ketagalan tribe, yesterday urged the government to create a separate ministry to handle Pingpu affairs.

“I don’t know why is it so hard for the CIP to officially recognize the Pingpu as Aborigines,” Lin told a news conference in Taipei. “The Pingpu have been considered indigenous peoples by the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues since 1994 and we’ve always been active in Aboriginal movements — why is it so hard to recognize us as Aborigines?”