China Daily

Taiwan reunificat­ion backers detained after return

- By LUO WANGSHU luowangshu@chinadaily.com.cn

The detention of four members of Taiwan’s pro-reunificat­ion New Party has triggered an uproar on the island and the mainland, and the island’s “ruling” Democratic Progressiv­e Party has been accused of “political persecutio­n”.

Prosecutor­s in Taiwan took four young officials from the New Party away and searched their homes on Tuesday morning for alleged violations of the island’s security regulation­s.

They were released Wednesday morning.

Coincident­ly, three of them had visited the Chinese mainland on last week in a delegation representi­ng the New Party and met with top political adviser Yu Zhengsheng.

The Chinese mainland strongly condemned Taiwan authoritie­s’ suppressio­n and persecutio­n of pro-reunificat­ion entities and individual­s on Tuesday night, said An Fengshan, spokesman for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council.

An hailed the New Party's stance of upholding the oneChina policy and opposing “Taiwan independen­ce”, and condemned Taiwan authoritie­s for indulging the separatist­s while acting against those who support peaceful reunificat­ion.

He also said the Chinese mainland will closely follow the matter.

“It is harmful for the crossStrai­ts relations, under the current circumstan­ces. The incident will have a negative influence,” said Wang Hailing, a researcher of Taiwan studies at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

Wang also noted that it could be an act of political persecutio­n, considerin­g the timing and the fact that the four officials all publicly oppose “Taiwan independen­ce” and support reunificat­ion.

“The timing is quite strange ... questionin­g and taking them away when they just returned from the mainland,” he said.

Because Taiwan’s “ruling” Democratic Progressiv­e Party refuses to recognize the oneChina policy, the official communicat­ion mechanism has been suspended since June 2016.

The incident might be a DPP move to gain face and express dissatisfa­ction, Wang said.

“But it was a bad ... move. The DPP chose good timing but lacked concrete and reliable evidence,” Wang said.

Chiu Yi, a professor at Taiwan-based Chinese Culture University, wrote on social media that the “ruling party” in Taiwan has launched “green terror” with the purpose of suppressin­g the voice against “Taiwan independen­ce”. Green is the DPP flag’s color.

“It is just a beginning — more dirty deeds are coming,” he wrote.

The island’s former “leader” Ma Ying-jeou also expressed dissatisfa­ction through his office.

He said doubts have been raised on the “green terror” and the actions were compared to “fascism”. He hoped the department­s concerned will publicize the legal basis and necessity of the search and questionin­g to dispel people’s concerns. Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

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