World News Quick Take – Taipei Times

CHINA

Envoy to WTO removed

Senior Chinese trade negotiator Li Chenggang (李成鋼) has been removed from his post as permanent representative to the WTO, Xinhua news agency reported yesterday, just days after US Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent described him as “unhinged.” Li, during a visit to Washington in August, had allegedly threatened that “China would unleash chaos on the global system if the US went ahead with our docking fees for Chinese ships,” Bessent said in an interview with CNBC on Wednesday last week, adding that his behavior was “slightly unhinged.” Xinhua yesterday published a list of ambassadorial appointments and changes, including the removal of Li as WTO envoy. Asked if the move was related to Bessent’s comments, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said: “This is a routine personnel change.” Li remains China’s international trade representative and vice minister of commerce.

Photo: Reuters

AUSTRALIA

PLA jet maneuver ‘unsafe’

Canberra yesterday raised concerns with Beijing after a Chinese fighter jet dropped flares near one of its maritime patrol planes, labeling the incident “unsafe and unprofessional.” The Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) jet released flares in close proximity to an Australian maritime patrol plane carrying out surveillance in the South China Sea, posing a risk to the latter craft and its crew, the Department of Defence said in a statement. “On two occasions, it released flares very close to the [Australian patrol plane] P-8,” Minister for Defence Richard Marles said in a TV interview with Sky News Australia. “And it’s really that, the proximity at which the flares were released, which has given us cause to deem this unsafe and unprofessional.” Marles said the government had raised its concerns with the Chinese embassy in Canberra and through the Australian embassy in Beijing. The Chinese embassy did not immediately respond to an e-mailed request for comment.

SOUTH KOREA

US acting envoy leaving

Acting US ambassador to South Korea Joseph Yun is to leave his position on Friday, the US embassy in Seoul said in a social media post yesterday. “The State Department expresses its deep appreciation to Ambassador Yun for his leadership and dedication in advancing the United States’ interests and further strengthening our enduring and ironclad commitment to the US-Republic of Korea Alliance,” the embassy wrote on X. Local media, including newspaper Hankyoreh, on Sunday reported that US Deputy Assistant Secretary for Japan, Korea and Mongolia Kevin Kim is expected to replace Yun as acting US ambassador to Seoul without citing a clear source. Yun leaving his post comes days before US President Donald Trump is expected to visit South Korea later this month for a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平).

UNITED STATES

AWS cloud hit by outage

Amazon Web Services (AWS) yesterday morning reported a widespread disruption that affected services on other platforms. “We can confirm increased error rates and latencies for multiple AWS Services in the US-EAST-1 Region.” Amazon.com Inc said on the AWS health dashboard. User complaints began spiking just after 7:30am London time, with data from Down Detector showing thousands of user reports. Artificial intelligence firm Perplexity said the AWS service disruption was “affecting the stability of the website.” A representative for Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment as of press time last night.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

chart visualization

UK elderly population at record high as more men live to very old age

Some 210,520 males were estimated to be aged 90 or over in 2024, more than double the number two decades earlier in 2004, which was 97,570. By contrast, the number of females rose by only a third during this period, from 309,300 in 2004 to 414,720 in 2024. It means that while the majority of

Why Democrats aren’t talking about climate change much anymore

Nearly a year after the 2024 election, Democrats are still trying to figure out what went wrong. In the midst of this soul-searching, a new piece of advice has appeared: “Don’t say climate change.”  That’s the takeaway from a recent poll by the Searchlight Institute, a new Democratic think tank. Americans said they see climate

Dinesh Kumar Patnaik, High Commissioner for India, presents his credentials to Governor General Mary Simon during a Letters of Credence Ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa, Canada, on Wednesday. (AP)

Onus on Canada to resume free trade talks: India

The onus is on Canada to resume free trade negotiations, India’s High Commissioner to Ottawa Dinesh Patnaik has indicated. Dinesh Kumar Patnaik, High Commissioner for India, presents his credentials to Governor General Mary Simon during a Letters of Credence Ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa, Canada, on Wednesday. (AP) In an interview with the network

Vance Travels to Israel to Try to Bolster Gaza Deal

new video loaded: Vance Travels to Israel to Try to Bolster Gaza Deal transcript Back transcript Vance Travels to Israel to Try to Bolster Gaza Deal Vice President JD Vance headed to Israel to ramp up support for the fragile cease-fire deal. Concerns have grown that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel could dismantle the

Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip.(REUTERS)

Why Gaza’s “eternal” ceasefire is holding—for now

ETERNITY IS NOT what it used to be. When Donald Trump visited the Middle East on October 13th to sign the Gaza ceasefire, he spoke of “peace for all eternity” in the region. Less than a week later, a clash between Israel and Hamas in southern Gaza left dozens of people dead. Some Israeli officials

chart visualization

UK Government borrowing surges to highest September figure in five years

Public sector net borrowing rose to £20.2 billion for the month, £1.6 billion higher than in September 2024, the Office for National Statistics said. Rising debt interest costs, pay rises and inflation increasing the Government’s day-to-day running costs, and inflation-linked benefit increases all helped push up the Government’s deficit last month. This more than offset