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RESTRICTIONS TO EASE: The number of Taiwanese traveling to Japan might rise 30 percent following an easing, but high costs and visa hurdles present obstaclesStaff writer, with CNA
Taipei, Aug. 31 (CNA) With Japan's announcement Wednesday that it will raise the daily cap on inbound visitors from 20,000 to 50,000 and drop the requirement for tourists to be in "guided" tour groups, Taiwanese travel agencies said they would look to team up with their Japanese counterparts to promote visits by Taiwanese tourists.
Taiwan is looking at using its "tea culture" as a new source of soft power diplomacy to boost cultural and people-to-people connect with India's Northeastern region. Taiwan's representative to India, Ambassador Baushuan Ger, says Taiwan produces distinctive varieties of tea and the common tea culture between the two countries can act as a catalyst to deepen bilateral cultural
This week marks the end of the historic collaboration between the Leon Guerrero-Tenorio administration, the Guam Department of Agriculture, Guam Animals In Need, Boonie Flight Project, the University of Guam
Taipei, July 29 (CNA) Taiwan's National Chung Hsing University (NCHU) will start working with the University of Guam from Aug. 2 to better manage the stray animal population in the United States territory, NCHU said Friday.
Taipei, July 14 (CNA) The Pingtung Forest District Office will hold a series of eight events at which residents will be offered a cash bounty to help remove an invasive plant that has been nicknamed "mile-a-minute vine" and "green cancer" because of its rampant growth.
The Pingtung Forest District Office is to hold a series of eight events offering residents a cash bounty to help remove an invasive plant nicknamed “mile-a-minute vine” and “green cancer” because of its rampant growth. Mikania micrantha thrives in humid, sunny climates, and is commonly found in orchards, fallow fields and on mountainsides at elevations below 1,000m, the forestry office said in a news release. Listed among the world’s 100 most invasive species, the vines grow densely on native plants and trees, smothering them by blocking their access to sunlight, the office said. The vines are extremely hard to eradicate, as even small
/ Staff writer, with CNAThe Pingtung Forest District Office is to hold a series of eight events offering residents a cash bounty to help remove an invasive plant nicknamed “mile-a-minute vine” and “green cancer” because of its rampant growth.