Taipei, Oct. 14 (CNA) Tsai Pi-ru (蔡壁如) of the Taiwan People's Party (TPP) announced Friday evening that she is stepping down as a legislator, effective immediately.
Taipei, Oct. 13 (CNA) Takming University of Science and Technology has revoked a master's degree conferred on Taiwan People's Party (TPP) Legislator Tsai Pi-ru (蔡壁如) for improper citations in her master's thesis that violated academic ethics, the university announced Thursday.
Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) Legislator Tsai Pi-ru (蔡壁如) yesterday denied allegations that she had plagiarized her master’s thesis, adding that she would wait for a university research ethics committee to rule on the matter.
Former Taoyuan City councilor Wang Hao-yu (王浩宇) said on Facebook on Saturday that he had notified Takming University of Science and Technology that Tsai’s master’s thesis might contain plagiarized content.
Tsai obtained her degree from an in-service master’s program at the university’s Management Information System Department.
Wang posted screenshots of several paragraphs from Tsai’s thesis alongside text from sources including news reports, Wikipedia posts and a
Looney s classes will be covered by existing faculty in the department for the remainder of the semester and he is expected to return to campus next school year.
Recruitment, Promotion: Massive irregularities found at BTRC
Anaet Shawon
25th January, 2021 09:50:51
Massive irregularities were found in recruitment and promotion at Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC), according to an audit.
The independent regulatory body appointed over 100 staffers, including a commissioner, and promoted at least a dozen officials to different posts from 2009 to 2018, violating rules and regulations.
It recruited manpower having lack of required educational qualifications and exceeding age limit, violating the conditions of circulars.
Even, retired government employees were appointed although there is no provision of hiring former public servants, as per the audit report obtained by the Daily Sun.
The audit conducted from October 4 to November 11, 2020 found that many officials were promoted although they lacked qualifications, experiences and exceeded the government age bar.