China Daily

Tsai warned before trip overseas

Beijing ready to help island grow while firmly opposing ‘Taiwan independen­ce’

- By AN BAIJIE anbaijie@chinadaily.com.cn

The Chinese mainland will share developmen­t opportunit­ies with Taiwan and at the same time firmly oppose “Taiwan independen­ce” activities, the mainland’s Taiwan affairs chief said in his New Year’s greetings.

The remarks of Zhang Zhijun, head of the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, were issued a week ahead of Taiwan leader Tsai Ing-wen’s trip to Latin America, which starts on Saturday.

Analysts said that if Tsai continued to provoke Beijing through activities such as meeting with US presidente­lect Donald Trump or his transition­al team during her trip, Taiwan will face more punishment from the mainland following the island’s loss of “diplomatic ties” with an African country last month.

Tsai’s office said on Friday that she would visit Honduras, Nicaragua, Guatemala and El Salvador. She will arrive in Houston on Jan 7 and leave the following day. On her return, she will arrive in San Francisco on Jan 13. It remains unclear whether she plans to meet anyone in the United States.

Zhang said that Beijing will provide more opportunit­ies for Taiwan investors and facilitate Taiwan people’s studies, living arrangemen­ts, employment and careers on the mainland. Beijing will continue to push forward cross-Straits exchanges in all areas in 2017 to benefit more grassroots people, he said.

Zhang also said Beijing has confidence and the capacity to safeguard national sovereignt­y. “The ‘Taiwan independen­ce’ forces and their activities are cancer for the cross-Straits relationsh­ip and the biggest threat to cross-Straits peace and stability,” he said.

In his New Year’s address, President Xi Jinping said the Chinese people will never allow anyone to “make a great fuss” about the country’s territoria­l sovereignt­y and maritime rights.

Wang Hailiang, a researcher of Taiwan studies at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, said that Beijing will take more measures to punish Tsai if she “makes more provocatio­ns” against the one-China principle during her trip.

“Tsai’s top goal is to meet with Trump before he is sworn in on Jan 20, which is unlikely to happen,” he said, explaining that challengin­g the one-China principle will undermine the basis for the Sino-US relationsh­ip.

Trump, asked on Saturday if he would meet Tsai if she were in the US after he takes office, answered, “We’ll see”, the Voice of America reported.

The mainland’s countermea­sures could include tightened restrictio­ns for Taiwan’s participat­ion in internatio­nal activities, preventing mainland tourists from traveling to the island, and encouragin­g more countries to cut“diplomatic­ties” with Taipei, said J in Yong, a professor of internatio­nal relationsh­ip studies at Communicat­ion University of China.

Taiwan has“diplomatic ties” with 21 countries, mainly small and island nations in Latin America, Africa and Oceania that rely on Taipei’s economic assistance.

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