Following a protest from the Formosan Association for Public Affairs (FAPA), Apple Inc has stopped referring to Taiwan as a province of China on its Web site.
Instead, Taiwan is now listed as a separate country along with more than 20  others ranging from Australia to the US.
A senior official at Apple  conceded that the company committed an “error” and that it had been  corrected.
FOUND BY EMPLOYEE
The mistake was  first noticed by a Taiwanese-American employee of Apple who wrote to FAPA about  it.
The employee found that Taiwan was listed as a province of China on  the company’s “Jobs at Apple” Web site, which is accessible to the general  public.
CHINESE ‘PROVINCE’
If an applicant  clicked on “China” under “Country” on the Apple employment page, the drop-down  menu provided five Chinese “provinces” to chose from: Beijing, Guangdong,  Jiangsu, Shanghai and Taiwan.
“It is of course an incontestable reality  that Taiwan is not a province of China,” FAPA president Bob Yang (楊英育) wrote to  Apple chief executive Steve Jobs.
SOVEREIGN  COUNTRY
“Taiwan is a sovereign independent country with its own  elected president, its own military and stock exchange,” he wrote.
“If  American citizens travel to Taiwan, the Chinese embassy is unable to issue a  visa to Taiwan,” Yang added.
“In light of the fact that several Apple  products are manufactured in Taiwan itself, I ask that Apple correct its  terminology in reference to Taiwan and stop referring to Taiwan as a province of  China,” Yang wrote.
In a letter of reply to Yang, the senior Apple  official wrote: “This is to confirm that the error in Apple’s job posting,  listing Taiwan under the provinces of China, has been corrected. Thank you for  bringing the matter to our attention.”
Source: Taipei Times - 2010/08/22



 









