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The CNA agency was founded 1 April 1924; 100 years ago (), by the Kuomintang.Party member Hsiao Tung-tzu separated the CNA from Kuomintang headquarters in 1932. [4] The agency's headquarters was originally located in Guangzhou in Guangdong province, but had to be relocated to Taipei in 1949, following the defeat of the Republic of China government in mainland China in the Chinese Civil War.
Taiwan's opposition parties, which hold a majority in parliament, last week passed legislation to shift spending from the central government to local municipalities, a move strongly contested by ...
Taiwan's official Central News Agency said the welcome exceeded those of past visits. "President Lai's transit was the first time that he was received at the airport, and a red carpet was rolled ...
Taiwan's Presidential Office conducted its first ever tabletop exercise simulating a military escalation with China, several officials briefed on the matter said, at a time when the island is ...
The Central Daily News was the official newspaper of the Kuomintang and is one of the world's oldest Chinese language newspapers, having been in circulation since 1928. The Kuomintang made the decision to temporarily cease publication of the newspaper effective June 1, 2006, because it could no longer subsidize the newspaper's snowballing debts, which had amounted to around NT$800 million (US ...
The 9th Brigade of the Coast Guard Administration of Taiwan (CGA) collided with a Chinese motorboat on 14 February 2024. [4] Both Taiwan's CGA and the Mainland Affairs Council stated that the boat was unmarked and unregistered. [5] [6] All four crew members of the Chinese motorboat were thrown into the water, two of whom later died. [7] [8]
This picture provided by the Hualien County Fire Department via Taiwan's Central News Agency (CNA) on October 31, 2024 shows a firefighter beside a roof blown away due to strong winds and rain ...
On 20 May 2024, a group of international academics, journalists, former officials (including former American Institute in Taiwan director William A. Stanton) and other critics of the reforms released a joint statement that said the proposed bill granted the Legislative Yuan "excessive power compared with other constitutional democracies and has ...