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Hualien City (pinyin: Huālián Shì; Wade-Giles: Hua¹-lien² Shih⁴; Hokkien POJ: Hoa-lian-chhī or Hoa-liân-chhī) is a county-administered city and the county seat of Hualien County, Taiwan. It is located on the east coast of Taiwan on the Pacific Ocean, and has a population of 99,458 inhabitants.
Taiwan Province would be reorganized once again in 1998 and Hualien County fell under the direct jurisdiction of the Executive Yuan. As of February 2023, Hualien's organic cultivation area was 3,175 hectares (7,850 acres), the largest of any county in the country. Hualien is the largest organic agricultural production base in Taiwan. [2]
Hualien County Government, Hualien County, Taiwan Hualien County Council; Beijing Hualian Group (Chinese: 华联 Huālián "China Union"), Beijing-based Chinese supermarket chain, also called Hualian Hualian Supermarket, a subsidiary of Shanghai-based Lianhua Supermarket, part of the Bailian Group
The Hualien County Government (Chinese: 花蓮縣政府; pinyin: Huālián Xiàn Zhèngfǔ) is the local government of the Republic of China that governs Hualien County. Organizational structure [ edit ]
Hualien Airport (Chinese: 花蓮機場; pinyin: Huālián Jīchǎng; Amis: Pahikukiyan nu Kalinku; Seediq: Rduwan Msangay Asu Skiya Skangki) (IATA: HUN, ICAO: RCYU), also referred to as Hualien Chiashan Airport, is a commercial airport located in an 11.5-hectare (28-acre) civilian area of Chiashan Air Force Base in Xincheng, Hualien County, Taiwan.
Downtown Yuli Yuli Township Office. Yuli Township (Chinese: 玉里鎮; pinyin: Yùlǐ Zhèn; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Gio̍k-lí-tìn; Japanese: Tamazato [ Kanji: 玉里 [たまざと] ]), Amis: Posko, Bunun: Pusqu (Hanzi transliterated by 1917: 璞石閣), is an urban township located in central Huadong Valley, and also the southern administrative center of Hualien County, Taiwan.
The Hualien County Council (HLCC; traditional Chinese: 花蓮縣議會; simplified Chinese: 花莲县议会; pinyin: Huālián Xiàn Yìhuì; Wade–Giles: Hua 1-lien 2 Hsien 4 I 4-hui 4) is the elected county council of Hualien County, Republic of China.
Due to the switch of diplomatic relations by Japan from the Republic of China to the People's Republic of China in 1972, there was an anti-Japanese sentiment in the island, which led to the demolishing of Japan-built buildings around Taiwan. In 1981, the shrine was demolished to make way for the construction of Hualien Martyrs' Shrine. [1]