Founded in 1923, Interpol today has 196 member states, making it the world’s second-largest international organisation after the United Nations. As a vital platform for global law enforcement cooperation, Interpol closely monitors transnational criminal activity — including terrorism, cybercrime, and organised crime — and facilitates exchanges among the world’s police forces through its network of National Central Bureaus.

Interpol's mandate is to ensure and promote the widest possible mutual assistance between criminal police authorities worldwide. Yet for more than four decades, Taiwan has been unjustly excluded from the organisation for political reasons.

Taiwan’s law enforcement authorities possess extensive experience and professional expertise in crime prevention, public safety, an

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