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2025 in Taiwan

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Events from the year 2025 in Taiwan, Republic of China. This year is numbered Minguo 114 according to the official Republic of China calendar.

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Incumbents

Government

The national government, elected in 2024, continues.

Events

January

February

  • 4 February – The Hsinchu District Court sentences nine people to up to ten years' imprisonment over the discovery of a cannabis-growing operation in Hsinchu County that becomes the largest such operation uncovered in Taiwan, with nearly 6,000 cannabis plants and related products valued at NT$2 billion (US$60.81 million) recovered.[7]
  • 5 February – A 73-year old man is arrested in Kaohsiung on suspicion of killing three women in a suspected serial murder.[8]
  • 13 February – 2025 Taichung Shin Kong Mitsukoshi gas explosion: Four people are killed in a gas explosion at a department store in Taichung.[9]
  • 15 February –
  • 21–25 February – The Taipei Dome hosts Pool A of the World Baseball Classic 2025 Qualifiers.[12]
  • 22 February – Amid unprecedented overcrowding in emergency rooms, the Taiwan Society of Emergency Medicine calls on the government to act.[13][14][15]
  • 25 February –
    • TPP lawmaker Wu Chun-cheng resigns from the Legislative Yuan amid allegations of conflict of interest in supporting a bill seeking to address aging through industrial development.[16]
    • The Taiwan-Penghu No. 3 submarine communications cable linking Taiwan island and Penghu County is severed, prompting the detention of a Togolese-flagged vessel and its Chinese crew by Taiwanese authorities after they were spotted in the vicinity of the area were the cable was cut.[17]
  • 26 February –
    • EVA Air imposes a ban on passengers using or charging power banks and spare lithium batteries on flights beginning on 1 March.[18]
    • The Disciplinary Court convicts former ambassador Michael Hsu of workplace sexual harassment when he was head of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in the Philippines from 2018 to 2023 and sentences him to an employment ban of three years and a fine of NT$500,000 (US$15,241).[19]

March

  • 3 March – US President Donald Trump and TSMC's CEO announce a new $100 billion investment to build chip manufacturing facilities in the United States. The investment requires approval by the Taiwanese government.[20]
  • 12 March – Chung Wen-chih absconds after failing to report to police following his sentencing to 30 years and five months in prison for securities fraud, from which he was accused of profiting NT$400 million.[21]
  • 13 March – In a speech, President Lai labels China a "foreign hostile force" and announces a set of new national security measures, including plans to reinstate a peacetime military court system.[22][23]

April

  • 1 April – China conducts military drills off Taiwan's coasts as a warning against Taiwan independence and as "punishment for the Lai Ching-te administration's rampant 'pro-independence' provocations".[24][25]
  • 7 April – Taiwan's benchmark stock market index drops by 9.7%, the largest one-day percentage fall in history.[26][27]
  • 9 April – US tariffs of 32% on imports from Taiwan, except semiconductors, take effect.[28][29]
  • 10 April – The US lowers a 32% tariff on imports from Taiwan to 10%, as part of a tariff pause for most countries.[30][31]
  • 30 April — Somalia imposes an entry ban on Taiwanese nationals due to Taiwan opening "unauthorized offices", prompting a reciprocal response by Taiwan on Somali nationals.[32]

May

June

  • 11 June – A ML 6.4 earthquake shakes the eastern coast, with shaking felt across the island and in parts of Penghu. No casualties are reported.[36]
  • 12 June – A Chinese ship captain is convicted and sentenced to three years' imprisonment by the Tainan District Court for damaging an undersea cable connecting the Taiwanese mainland to Penghu.[37]
  • 23 June – Fares on the Taiwan Railway increase for the first time in 30 years.[38]

July

August

September

October

  • 1 October – Digital activist Audrey Tang is awarded the Right Livelihood Award for her role in "advancing the social use of digital technology to empower citizens, renew democracy and heal divides".[56]
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Holidays

Source:[57]

Deaths

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References

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