Foreign News
Taiwan launches first domestically built submarine

Taiwan has on Thursday launched its first domestically built submarine.
The country President, Tsai Ing-wen, said building submarines domestically was an important combat force to protect Taiwan’s borders.
“Today will be remembered in the history, we did it,’’ Tsai said.
She said this at the launching ceremony in southern Kaohsiung City.
She added that it was once regarded as an impossible task for Taiwan to build its own submarines.
“Building submarines domestically is not only a goal but also a concrete practice to firmly protect our country,’’ Tsai said.
Tsai said that, in 2025, the new submarine will join two submarines purchased from the Netherlands in the 1980s.
“Taiwan then will have three submarines with full combat capabilities in service,’’ she said.
Sandra Oudkirk, the director of the American Institute in Taiwan, which served as Washington’s de facto embassy, attended the ceremony.
Trade representatives from South Korea and Japan, who are based in Taiwan, were also there.
The new submarine, named Hai Kun in Mandarin, or Narwhal, would undergo a harbour acceptance test from Sunday, before testing at sea.
“It is due to be delivered to the Navy by the end of 2024.’’
Taiwan’s Naval Command said Thursday that building submarines domestically was an important policy for Taiwan’s national defence independence.
Through cooperation with shipbuilder CSBC Corporation, the navy demonstrates a resilience and determination to defend Taiwan to the world, the command said.
According to Huang Shu-kuang, convener of Taiwan’s Indigenous Defence Submarine (IDS) programme, Taiwan’s goal is to let the first new domestically built submarine join the fleet in 2025.
Whilt the second one in 2027, to boost combat capability, state-run Central News Agency reported.
Huang estimated that a fleet of 10 submarines operated by Taiwan would make it harder for the Chinese navy to extend its power to the Pacific.
According to Taiwan’s national defence report released early this month, the navy of China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) aims to gain control over strategic positions in the Pacific by 2035.
Wu Qian, spokesman for the Chinese Defence Ministry, said on Thursday that preventing the PLA from entering the Pacific is nonsense.
Taiwan faces a growing military threat from China.
Taiwan has had an independent government since 1949, but China considers the democratic island part of its territory.
A programme for the development of eight submarines was launched in December 2016. In May 2019, Tsai hosted a ground-breaking ceremony for the island’s first shipyard for self-built submarines.
CSBC Corporation chairman Cheng Wen-lon said at the ceremony that more than 1,000 people were involved in building the new submarine.
The prototype, which is 70 metres long and 8 metres wide, is equipped with a combat system by Lockheed Martin Corp, U.S.-made MK-48 heavyweight torpedoes and UGM-84 Harpoon missiles.
In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning on Thursday accused Tsai’s ruling party in Taiwan of undermining peace in the region.
She said Taiwanese citizens’ hard-earned money was being squandered on the purchase of weapons.
Foreign News
China to Eliminate Tariffs on Imports from African Countries

China has announced the full removal of tariffs on imports from all African countries, ENA, a partner of TV BRICS, has reported.
The tariff elimination falls under the new China-Africa Economic Partnership for Shared Development, a framework designed to accelerate Africa’s integration into global trade by increasing market access, improving customs procedures, and strengthening institutional trade capacity.
The initiative is part of a broader effort by Beijing to support industrialisation, diversify imports, and reinforce economic links with African states beyond raw materials.
President Xi Jinping reaffirmed China’s readiness to welcome all African exports under zero-tariff treatment.
He emphasised that the new arrangement would be accompanied by enhanced cooperation in customs, quarantine, logistics, and capacity building.
China also pledged to support training programmes and expand the visibility of high-quality African goods in the Chinese market.
In 2024, China–Africa trade reached nearly 300 billion dollars, consolidating China’s position as Africa’s largest trading partner.
Observers note that the new tariff policy may further strengthen the African Continental Free Trade Area by encouraging intra-African production and export diversification.
The strategic shift is expected to unlock new opportunities for value-added goods and services from across the continent, reinforcing Africa’s role in global supply chains. (TV BRICS/NAN)
CRIME
Man in Germany Charged with Serial Rape After Drugging Victims

German prosecutors on Tuesday have charged a 43-year-old Chinese national with 22 offences, including attempted murder and aggravated rape after drugging victims, in some cases involving women he knew.
The accused, who was not identified, is suspected of sedating women with sleeping pills and raping them in eight cases.
Prosecutors in Frankfurt said some victims knew the defendant and were unaware of what was happening.
In four cases, the man is suspected of overpowering, anaesthetising and raping the victims during property viewings and of videoing or photographing the acts.
In seven cases, the drug dose was so high it may have endangered victims’ lives, prosecutors said in a statement.
The accused is alleged to have been a member of the Telegram online platform for several years, where he exchanged information about how to sexually assault unconscious women.
He is also believed to have illegally sold sedatives to other chat participants, prosecutors said.
The man from Offenbach, near Frankfurt, is believed to have committed the offences between January 2020 and November 2024, and has been in custody since November 2024, prosecutors said.
The charges follow the high-profile case of Dominique Pelicot in France, convicted in December of repeatedly drugging and raping his wife for almost a decade and inviting dozens of strangers to rape her unconscious body. (Reuters/NAN)
Foreign News
Man Bites Off Part of Another Man’s Ear On Train

A fight on a German train saw a man bite off a piece of another man’s ear, police said on Monday.
The incident occurred on a Deutsche Bahn train between the south-western cities of Mannheim and Stuttgart.
An argument broke out after an unknown man accused a 43-year-old man of looking at his partner.
The former bit the ear of the 43-year-old, who retaliated by biting the man’s finger.
According to police, the unidentified man and his companion were able to leave the train at the central station in Stuttgart and fled.
Police said that they are searching for the man’s identity.
The 43-year-old was taken to the hospital, where the piece of his ear was sewn back on.
(dpa/NAN)(www.nannews.ng)