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    Home » Premier urges Taiwan to look beyond the Strait
    Local June 8, 20262 Mins Read

    Premier urges Taiwan to look beyond the Strait

    National Ocean Day event at Kaohsiung Port included Coast Guard ship tours, performances and marine education exhibits
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    By Eryk Michael Smith. Photos by the author.

    KAOHSIUNG — Alongside National Ocean Day festivities on Sunday, which featured ship tours, stage shows, and exhibits, came a blunt political message: Taiwan needs to look out to sea, not only across the Strait.

    Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰), greets people alongside Ocean Affairs Council Minister Kuan Bi-ling (管碧玲)

    The seventh National Ocean Day (國家海洋日), organized by the Ocean Affairs Council (海洋委員會), was held at Piers 16 and 17, with the 4,000-ton Coast Guard vessel Yunlin (雲林艦) opening to the public for the first time. Long lines formed as visitors waited to board.

    A childrens’ band plays on the deck of the new Coast Guard ship, Yunlin.

    Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰), speaking alongside Ocean Affairs Council Minister Kuan Bi-ling (管碧玲), said the event was the first National Ocean Day since the Marine Conservation Act took effect. He thanked Coast Guard personnel, academics, and conservation groups for their work protecting Taiwan’s waters.

    Wild at Heart Legal Defense Association’s Robin Winkler was among those honored for conservation work.

    Cho also said the Coast Guard would play a bigger role in anti-drug work, as the Executive Yuan prepares a central command group to fight organized crime and drug trafficking.

    The 4,000-ton Coast Guard vessel Yunlin (雲林艦)

    But the larger theme was Taiwan’s maritime future. Cho said Taiwan’s technology sector and position in the Indo-Pacific have made it central to regional stability, adding that the country now has the confidence to “look at the world from Taiwan.”

    Taiwan, he said, should face the Pacific and the wider world rather than remain locked in a China-centered view.

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