People in a busy shopping district in Taipei yesterday afternoon had a shock when they saw what looked like Taiwan Power Co (Taipower) employees in full protective suits moving a yellow barrel with a radiation hazard sign and the words “radioactive waste” on it.
In reality, it was a skit by environmentalists to raise public awareness of the dangers of nuclear energy.
“Excuse us! Excuse us! We have a situation here!” a man said as he walked onto a square in front of one of Zhongxiao Fuxing MRT Station’s exits.

PHOTO: LOA IOK-SIN, TAIPEI TIMES
An ID tag around his neck identified him as Lee Ming-she (李民熙), a nuclear engineer at Taipower’s First Nuclear Power Plant.
In Lee’s wake were four people wearing white protective suits carrying a yellow barrel with its mysterious contents.
As the four walked, they tripped and overturned the barrel.
They immediately blocked off the area with traffic cones and yellow gauze.
They then distributed small red stickers bearing the word “iodine” to passersby.
“We’re giving you iodine pills because they can help reduce the impact of radiation exposure,” one of them said.
“We were told by our superiors to carry the nuclear waste here, I cannot give further information,” Lee said. “I cannot tell you exactly what we will do next.”
Many passersby looked surprised and some stopped to look.
“Is this some kind of drill?” a man asked.
“Are they shooting a movie?” a woman asked.
Lee is not a Taipower engineer and his real name is Hung Shen-han (洪申翰). He is the executive secretary of the Green Citizens’ Action Alliance.
“At the moment, all nuclear waste is temporarily stored on Orchid Island [蘭嶼] in Taitung County, and Taipower is having some difficulties finding a permanent storage site,” Hung told the Taipei Times after the skit.
Under current plans, Nantian Village (南田) — a Paiwan Aboriginal village in Taitung County’s Daren Township (達仁) — is most likely to be selected as a permanent storage site.
“People living in cities are the ones benefiting most from nuclear energy and it is people in remote areas who suffer the consequences,” Hung said.
“We can’t pretend that highly pollutant and radioactive nuclear waste doesn’t exist just because we dump it on some remote island or in Aboriginal villages,” he said.
“We’re here to remind people in Taipei that nuclear energy is not the solution,” he said.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday voiced dissatisfaction with the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans- Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), whose latest meeting, concluded earlier the same day, appeared not to address the country’s application.In a statement, MOFA said the CPTPP commission had "once again failed to fairly process Taiwan’s application," attributing the inaction to the bloc’s "succumbing to political pressure," without elaborating.Taiwan submitted its CPTPP application under the name "Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu" on Sept. 22, 2021 -- less than a week after China
More than 100 colleges on both sides of the Pacific will work together to bring students to Taiwan so they can learn Mandarin where it is spoken A total of 102 universities from Taiwan and the US are collaborating in a push to promote Taiwan as the first-choice place to learn Mandarin, with seven Mandarin learning centers stood up in the US to train and support teachers, the Foundation for International Cooperation in Higher Education of Taiwan (FICHET) said.At the annual convention of the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages held over the weekend in New Orleans, Louisiana, a Taiwan Pavilion was jointly run by 17 representative teams from the FICHET, the Overseas Community Affairs Council, the Steering Committee for the Test of Proficiency-Huayu, the
A home-style restaurant opened by a Taiwanese woman in Quezon City in Metro Manila has been featured in the first-ever Michelin Guide honoring exceptional restaurants in the Philippines.The restaurant, Fong Wei Wu (豐味屋), was one of 74 eateries to receive a “Michelin Selected” honor in the guide, while one restaurant received two Michelin stars, eight received one star and 25 were awarded a “Bib Gourmand.”The guide, which was limited to restaurants in Metro Manila and Cebu, was published on Oct. 30.In an interview, Feng Wei Wu’s owner and chef, Linda, said that as a restaurateur in her 60s, receiving an
China would adopt a long-term pressure strategy to prevent other countries or future prime ministers following in Sanae Takaichi’s steps, an academic said Taiwan should maintain communications with Japan, as Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is to lead a revision of security documents, Taiwanese academics said yesterday.Tensions have risen between Japan and China over remarks by Takaichi earlier this month that the use of force against Taiwan would constitute a “survival-threatening situation” for Japan.Prospect Foundation president Lai I-chung (賴怡忠) yesterday said Takaichi’s stance regarding Taiwan is the same as past Japanese prime ministers, but her position is clearer than that of her predecessors Fumio Kishida and Shigeru Ishiba.Although Japan views a “Taiwan contingency” as a “survival-threatening situation,” which would allow its military to
