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Pai Hsiao-yen disappeared after leaving for her school, Hsing Wu High School, [1] on the morning of April 14, 1997. Her family received a ransom note demanding US$5,000,000 (equivalent to about $9,490,000 in 2023) along with a severed piece of her finger and a photograph of a bound girl.
Amber Poon Hiu-wing (5 August 1997 – 17 February 2018), [note 1] [1] [2] a 20-year-old pregnant woman from Hong Kong, was killed in Taipei on 17 February 2018 whilst on vacation with her boyfriend Chan Tong-kai (born 13 December 1998), [note 2] aged 19 at the time and from Shenzhen.
The two girls were good friends and planned to undertake individual studies with by professors of Chemistry and Mathematics in National Taiwan University over the upcoming holiday. On 23 July 1994, the two girls left home for Jindu Motel in front of Su'ao Station of Yilan County. At noon on 25 July, the motel staff found their bodies in the ...
Chinese anti-infanticide tract circa 1800. During the 19th century, the practice was widespread. Readings from Qing texts show a prevalence of the term ni nü (to drown girls), and drowning was the most common method used to kill female children. Other methods used were suffocation and starvation.
Aodi, Yilan County, Taiwan Province 25 By Taiwan Garrison Command: Lunqing Western Restaurant fire: 1993-01-19 Taipei: 33 by unknown [22] Carlton Barber's Shop fire: 1993-05-12 Taipei: 21 (including the perpetrator) by Liang Hsin-teng (梁兴登) Murder of Liu Pang-yu: 1996-11-21 Taoyuan: 8 by Two Killers Luzhou fire: 2003-08-31 New Taipei City: 16
Lin Yu-ju (born 1981) is a Taiwanese serial killer responsible for the Nantou Serial Murders between 2008 and 2009. As part of an insurance scam to get rid of her gambling debts, Lin poisoned her mother, mother-in-law, and ex-husband in Puli.
A Taiwanese woman shared pictures of lengthy metatarsals on Friday that have since sent the internet into a tailspin. Woman's toes look just like fingers, internet loses it Skip to main content
The status of women in Taiwan has been based on and affected by the traditional patriarchal views and social structure within Taiwanese society, which put women in a subordinate position to men, although the legal status of Taiwanese women has improved in recent years, particularly during the past three decades when the family law underwent several amendments.