Ma mixes up nation's allies in Central
America
By Ko Shu-ling
STAFF REPORTER
Tuesday, Jan 19, 2010, Page 1
President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) yesterday mistakenly said he would visit Costa Rica
during his trip to Central American allies planned for next week.
Taiwan severed diplomatic ties with Costa Rica in June 2007 after the Central
American nation switched recognition to China.
Ma said he was going to Honduras to attend the inauguration of president-elect
Porfirio Lobo Sosa and that he also planned to “go to Costa Rica to see the
ambassador and consul [to Haiti] who are hospitalized and have suffered serious
injuries” during last week’s earthquake that devastated the Haitian capital,
Port-au-Prince.
Ambassador to Haiti Hsu Mien-sheng (徐勉生) suffered a fracture to his left leg
during the temblor, while Consul Chi Wang-teh (齊王德) sustained head injuries,
facial lacerations, a broken rib and some chest and back injuries.
Hsu and Chi are currently hospitalized in the Dominican Republic’s capital,
Santo Domingo.
They were sent there to receive medical attention after being dug out of the
debris.
The pair were trapped for six hours before a rescue team discovered them.
Ma said he would consider whether his visit could result in inconvenience and
that he would cancel the plan if there were signs that it could.
“The most important thing is for us to send our love and resources [to Haiti],”
he said.
Ma made the remarks while meeting winners of this year’s model firefighters and
volunteer firefighters at the Presidential Office yesterday morning.
Ma will visit Honduras from next Monday through Jan. 30 and is weighing the
possibility of 赳isiting the Dominican Republic to express the nation’s support
for quake victims.
Ma is scheduled to make a one-night stopover in San Francisco before heading to
the Honduran capital of Tegucigalpa, and is expected to make a short stopover in
Los Angeles on the way back to Taiwan.
Ma yesterday made yet another slip-up when he misidentified the leader of the
country’s rescue team, Lin Chien-chih (林謙志), as Lin Chin-chih (林勤志).
Ma said that he was happy to have had a chance to talk with Lin on the telephone
on Sunday night and that Lin told him the team had rescued a 35-year-old French
UN worker.
Ma said he told Lin to stay safe, adding that “we are not afraid to risk our
necks, but it will cause more trouble if accidents happen because we neglected
to ensure our personal safety.”
Meanwhile, Presidential Office Spokesman Wang Yu-chi (王郁琦) said yesterday that
Ma would be happy to meet US parliamentarians and local politicians during his
stopovers in the US.
Wang said Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng (王金平) conveyed a request by
lawmakers that as fewer US senators were visiting Taiwan, they hoped Ma could
invite more US parliamentarians during his stopovers in the US.
Senior officials attending yesterday’s weekly lunch hosted by Ma at the
Presidential Office also said that they hoped Ma would take advantage of his
transits in the US to mend fences with Washington after the US beef controversy.
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