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The Central News Agency (CNA) is Taiwan's semi-official wire service.
Central News Agency of Taiwan | |
中央通訊社
| |
Abbreviation | CNA |
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Established | 1 April 1924; 100 years ago (1924-04-01)[1] |
Founder | Kuomintang |
Founded at | Guangzhou, Guangdong[1] |
Type | News agency (state-owned)[1] |
Legal status | Non-profit organisation[1] |
Location | |
Region served | Worldwide, 30 locations[1] |
Products | News |
Services | Journalism |
Official languages | Standard Chinese, English, Japanese,[1] Indonesian, Spanish (closed 2021[2]) |
Owner | Government of the Republic of China |
Parent organization | Executive Yuan |
Employees | 300 |
Website | cna.com.tw focustaiwan.tw |
Central News Agency | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 中央通訊社 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 中央通讯社 | ||||||
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In addition to its Chinese language edition, it also has English and Japanese editions. It has a 300-strong employee base, and overseas branches in some 30 countries. It works with a number of well-known news agencies around the world, such as the Associated Press, Reuters, Deutsche Welle, and Agence France-Presse.
The CNA agency was founded 1 April 1924; 100 years ago (1924-04-01), by the Kuomintang party. Its headquarters was originally located in GuangzhouinGuangdong province, but had to be relocated to Taipei in 1949, following the defeat of the Republic of China government in mainland China in the Chinese Civil War.[1]
Despite the corporatisation of the agency in 1973, it continued to receive heavy government subsidies, and remained the nation's official agency. At the time, CNA journalists received preferential treatment on various occasions, mostly government-related press conferences.[citation needed]
After democratization, on 1 July 1996, the agency became a non-profit organisation under a bill passed by the Legislative Yuan.[1] As of 2022, it is still Taiwan's official news agency, and received part of its funding from the Executive Yuan. However, its media influence is said[by whom?] to have diminished due to a rise in competition after the government decided to lift restrictions on mass media.[citation needed]
English version website is Focus Taiwan. A Spanish language edition, Enfoque en Taiwán, was closed 31 March 2021.[2] In August 2021, CNA oversaw the launch of the TaiwanPlus streaming platform.[3] In July 2024, an Indonesian language version of CNA's website was released,[4] with articles translated from Chinese and English via artificial intelligence and a team of Indonesian-speaking editors.[5]
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