By Lee I-chia / Staff reporter, with CNABlood supplies are running critically low throughout the nation, with only an average of 3.2 days of stock available, especially type A blood, Taiwan Blood Services Foundation data showed yesterday.
WAGE ‘DONATION’: Whistle-blowers gave evidence that staff had been required to funnel salaries into an office fund for the lawmaker’s personal expensesBy Jason Pan / Staff reporter
FEEDING THE BEAST: Western democracies’ policy of appeasing China has allowed it to grow into one of the biggest threats to modern civilization, Wuer Kaixi saidBy Shelley Shan / Staff reporter
The nationalization of Taiwan’s 17 irrigation associations under the Agency of Irrigation in July 2020 did not contravene the Constitution, the Constitutional Court ruled yesterday.
The move did not contravene the principle of legal clarity, nor people’s freedom of association, guaranteed by Article 14 of the Constitution, said Judicial Yuan President Hsu Tzong-li (許宗力), who heads the Constitutional Court.
The nationalization process did not infringe on property rights, nor did it violate the non-retroactivity principle or the principle of legitimate expectation, Hsu said.
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) legislators said the nationalization of the irrigation associations under the Irrigation Act (農田水利法) was disproportionate and
‘NO BREACHES’: The Cabinet got backing from the Constitutional Court after it said that the former irrigation association system was not based on constitutional rightsBy Wu Cheng-feng, Chang Wen-chuan and Jake Chung / Staff reporters, with staff writer