thanks for sharing. i've known of unbelievable police handling of an unnatural death in siem reap too. so much so for the protection we have in our country, we may not believe that some people will handle them in such a manner elsewhere. perhaps sometimes we will even see people having mishaps in developed countries and yet get some unconcerned handling too.
but the problem is it does not matter what the laws stated, it is how they are implemented.
i'll put together your inputs with the laos section. and probably start a thread sourcing for ideas of protection of gear for overseas trip.
Taiwan
A) power adapter
2 flat parallel pin. US-Japan types.
B) is it easy to travel to remote areas on your own?
in general, travelling along the trains are not difficult. basically taiwan is like peninsular malaysia and have the mountain range like a spine on the back, hence the train loops like a oval around the island, divided mainly into the eastern side and the western side linked up by the northern and the southern loop. internal flights cost about S$100. long distance trains cost about half of that. going up mountains will not be that easy as taiwan does not seem to tailor for backpacking practices for foreigners. does not suggest renting cars as accidents may happened for difficult mountain roads. even with lobangs, taxi will be expensive for these places. however, determined guys without time constraint and without tight budgets can still overcome this problem if you can speak some mandarin. and yes, those locals who do not speak mandarin or speak more taiwanese (taiwanese hokkien) will understand mandarin.
C) topics to avoid talking with a Taiwanese
political issues and cultural identity. they always have the opinion of singaporeans being too nosey into chinese-taiwanese relationship and can have a love-hatred feeling about it. in general, a mandarin speaking person is more likely to be blue whereas a taiwanese speaking person is more likely to be green, but to avoid it is the best and the safest, especially when we can only hear half side of the story in singapore, and yes, even with the cable channels.
D) what is worth exploring off the usual places other singaporeans goes?
near taipei: yangmingshan,
scenic places: the eastern coasts and the central mountaineous areas.
the essence, 3 standard places that japanese likes to visits - tarogo gouge, riyue tan, alishan
my personal recommendation: cchengkeng farm aka qingjing or ching jing (however very difficult to travel to as a foreigner, public transport requires at least 2 coaches between taichung to puli and puli to that place at hard to catch timing, most locals drove there) you can search in chinese the information
here.
More inputs from Guni_hoon
"btw, I have just been to Taiwan. Ching Jing farmstay is between Taroko Gorge and Puli, its location I considered in the middle of Taiwan and not readily accessible by train. We drove."
"link to taiwan maps/road directory.
http://www.urmap.com/
2 places I watched sunrises in Taiwan, at
1. Alishan Zhu Shan (祝山

- can take the local train in Alishan, or
2. Tataka 塔塔加 at road landmark 140km. i heard it is a new place."
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