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Taipei Times


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# Article Title Author Hits
981 Tired of KMT’s moronic stunts Taipei Times Editorial 562
982 Reclaiming ‘one China’ narrative Dai Kee Liu 560
983 Polls are not Han’s concern; it is money Chen Mao-hsiung 陳茂雄 530
984 The Formosa Incident: a look back Gerrit Van Der Wees 545
985 Taiwan the right choice for helping the US Navy Yang Chung-hsin 楊宗新 507
986 Hong Kong: The world is watching Taipei Times Editorial 549
987 Politicians sink to a new low Taipei Times Editorial 499
988 Pro-China parties must be rejected Paul Lin 林保華 545
989 KMT in a panic over ‘spy’ allegations Taipei Times Editorial 567
990 US Army should choose Taiwan Grant Newsham 535
991 Beware tiger, mice can roar Taipei Times Editorial 591
992 HK at the front of a new Cold War Wir fur Hongkong 494
993 Democrats must stand up to China Gray Sergeant 530
994 US port calls benefit Taiwan Taipei Times Editorial 492
995 Reading between the lines Taipei Times Editorial 553
996 Slavery on China’s plantations Taipei Times Editorial 488
997 All languages equally important Taipei Times 506
998 Taiwan’s economy on the upswing Taipei Times Editorial 517
999 US and Australia too late on Pacific Bill Sharp 562
1000 Czechs turn PRC game against it Joseph Bosco 504
 
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Newsflash

Draft amendments to allow people accused of spying for China to be indicted on foreign aggression charges and to allow political parties to be indicted on organized crime charges was approved yesterday by the legislature’s Judiciary and Organic Laws and Statutes Committee.

Prosecutors have traditionally cited the National Security Act (國家安全法) when indicting alleged Chinese spies because the treason and foreign aggression offenses stipulated in the Criminal Code only apply to crimes committed on behalf of an “enemy state.”