Deutsche Welle (English edition)

'Chinese Taipei': Taiwan's Olympic success draws attention to team name

Taiwanese athletes made history at the 2020 Olympics, but the IOC requires Taiwan to compete as "Chinese Taipei" to avoid the ire of Beijing. Some athletes now say they want the name changed.

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As the 2020 Tokyo Olympics comes to an end this week, Taiwan's record-breaking number of medals has put a spotlight on the name of its delegation at internatio­nal competitio­ns like the Olympics.

Over the past three weeks, athletes from Taiwan have won a total of 12 medals at the Tokyo Olympics, including a first gold medal in badminton.

After defeating their opponents from China in the final of the men's doubles match, one of the players, Lee Yang, wrote on his Facebook that his team had made Taiwan visible on the world stage as he dedicated the gold medal to "my country Taiwan."

However, for decades, what would be called team Taiwan has been competing under the name "Chinese Taipei" at the Olympics.

Why 'Chinese Taipei?'

This is a result of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee's (IOC) decision to recognize Beijing over Taipei in the 1970s, which barred Taiwan from competing in the Olympics as a country.

Prior to the IOC's decision, the Republic of China (ROC), which remains Taiwan's official name, competed in some Olympics under different names and it also boycotted some games as the government tried to resist pressure from the People's Republic of China (PRC.)

After Taiwan was barred from competing in the Olympics as a country after the IOC sided with

Beijing, it reached a compromise with the IOC in 1981 to compete under the name "Chinese Taipei," which essentiall­y prevented Taiwan from presenting itself as a sovereign state.

This also meant that Taiwan is barred from using its official flag or national anthem at the Olympics. Instead, Taiwan plays a flag-raising song and waves a white flag that carries the Olympic rings.

'Taiwan' still used in media coverage

Despite the lack of official "Taiwanese" representa­tion, the name "Taiwan" was still used on some occasions during the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

For example, an anchor at Japan's public broadcaste­r used Taiwan rather than Chinese Taipei to introduce the Taiwanese delegation during the opening ceremony.

Additional­ly, many foreign media reports about Taiwan's performanc­e during the Olympics also use Taiwan rather than Chinese Taipei to introduce the team.

According to Chiaoning Su, a Taiwanese journalism scholar at the Oakland University in the United States, the trend of foreign media using Taiwan to report the Olympic team's performanc­e is an extension of the recent increase of Taiwan's overall visibility in the world.

"As the conflict between the US and China has intensifie­d over the last few years, Taiwan's internatio­nal visibility has increased tremendous­ly," she told DW. "It shows how that visibility has effectivel­y created a more favorable narrative on Taiwan."

Beijing fumes at use of team 'Taiwan'

After several foreign media outlets published reports about Taiwan's complicate­d team name at the Olympics, Beijing responded furiously to one story published by the BBC's Chinese website.

In the article published on August 2, the BBC explained the various names that Taiwan's Olympics team has used over the years. On August 4, the spokespers­on at the Chinese embassy in London lashed out at the British broadcaste­r, criticizin­g the article for "sensationa­lizing the question of the 'Chinese Taipei' team at the Tokyo Olympics."

"[China] strongly urges these media to follow internatio­nal consensus and profession­al conduct, to stop politicizi­ng sports, and to stop interferen­ce with the Tokyo Olympic games," the spokespers­on said.

The embassy reiterated that there is only one China in the world and Taiwan remains an inalienabl­e part of China.

"This objective and unquestion­able fact will not change, nor will it change the internatio­nal consensus to maintain the 'One China Principle,'" the embassy added. Lev Nachman, a postdoctor­al research fellow at Harvard University's Fairbank Center, said Beijing’s response has been very predictabl­e.

"If the People's Republic of China hears someone vaguely referring to Taiwan in any kind of positive way, then they are upset, so that's not the interestin­g part," he told DW.

"It's the internatio­nal attention that's far more novel. There are so many non-typical countries speaking of Taiwan positively because of the Olympics," Nachman added.

Another attempt at an Olympic name- change for Taiwan?

The growing internatio­nal discussion about Taiwan's Olympic team name has also renewed the campaign for a name change.

Taiwan's three-time Olympian Chi Cheng is considerin­g launching a referendum to push the government to change Taiwan's name at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

This is not the first time that Chi has called for a name-change referendum. In 2018, she spearheade­d a campaign to seek a name change for Taiwan ahead of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. However, after several high-profile athletes came out against the campaign, the referendum did not meet quorum.

Nachman said if there is another referendum about Taiwan's Olympic name change, it will be worth observing the response of the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP), which leans towards promoting Taiwan's sovereignt­y.

"Getting into a formal namechange opens up a Pandora's box that I don't think the DPP wants to deal with right now," he said.

The leader of Taiwan's legislatur­e, You Si-kun, said on Thursday that while he supports Taiwan's name-change initiative­s, it needs to be done in a manner that ensures athletes' rights and interests are not sacrificed.

"Taiwan's great success at the Tokyo Olympics is very encouragin­g and it helps Taiwan to be seen by the world," he said during an interview.

few trees per unit area.

That means that each tree has more ground and water to feed on, and their roots grow deeper. That kind of stability is very important in dry spells and strong winds. Forest pastures can help maintain these stable, "light" woods and reduce fuel for fire.

But it's not only underdevel­oped countries that lack the nancial means or even the sociopolit­ical will to adapt to the new realities.

I agree. We're all going through a collective process of learning how to deal with climate change. The whole world, but especially in southern and southeast Europe, those old cultural landscapes are going through a process of change. And a lot of that has to do with the way land is used. That is what's leading to these dangerous and destructiv­e fires.

It is, however, incredibly difficult to get it through to the expedient, fast-paced world of politics that we need long-term solutions. Quickly buying in new technology, like fire engines or water-bomber planes, is so much easier and attractive to politics.

Prof. Dr. Johann Georg Goldammer is a re ecologist. His research group is part of the Forest Science Faculty at the University of Freiburg and the United Nations University. He is a senior scientist at the Max Planck Society for Chemistry, Biogeochem­istry and heads the UN's Global Fire Monitoring Center.

This interview was adapted from German and conducted by Alexander Freund.

 ??  ?? Athletes from Taiwan arrive at the opening ceremony in Tokyo waving the flag of 'Chinese Taipei'
Athletes from Taiwan arrive at the opening ceremony in Tokyo waving the flag of 'Chinese Taipei'
 ??  ?? The Gold medal badminton match between Chinese Taipei (blue) and China at the 2020 Olympics
The Gold medal badminton match between Chinese Taipei (blue) and China at the 2020 Olympics

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