Kuwait Times

Hong Kong rebel lawmakers face protests in Taiwan

-

TAIPEI: Pro-China protesters waving placards reading “Independen­ce will get you nowhere” greeted Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong and three rebel lawmakers as they arrived in Taipei yesterday. Wong, along with Hong Kong legislator­s Nathan Law, Eddie Chu, and Edward Yiu, is attending a political forum hosted by Taiwan’s New Power Party (NPP), which is advocating for recognitio­n of Taiwan as a nation.

The two-day event aimed at linking democracy movements in Hong Kong and Taiwan has provoked a hostile reception from pro-unificatio­n groups on the island over what they see as a joint independen­ce movement. Television footage showed a scuffle when one of the more than 200 protesters at the Taipei airport broke through the police line and attempted to throw a punch at the Hong Kong activists. Around 50 pro-China protesters also gathered at Hong Kong’s airport for Wong’s departure.

“This really is a bit outrageous,” Wong said of the reception in Taiwan. Wong led massive prodemocra­cy rallies in Hong Kong in 2014 bringing tens of thousands onto the streets calling for reform amid concern that Beijing is tightening its grip on the semi-autonomous city.

The city’s government recently launched a legal bid to unseat a number of pro-democracy lawmakers including Law, the youngest ever legislator in Hong Kong. Beijing has also been ratcheting up pressure on democratic­ally-elected Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen and her Beijing-sceptic Democratic Progressiv­e Party, which has refused to acknowledg­e the concept there is only “one China.”

The two sides split in 1949 after a civil war and Taiwan has been a self-governed island since. However, Beijing still sees it part of its territory to be brought back into its fold. China’s Taiwan Affairs Office last month denounced this weekend’s forum as a collusion between independen­ce advocates that is doomed to fail. The NPP emerged from a 2014 student occupation of Taiwan’s parliament protesting a trade deal with China that known as the Sunflower movement.

Its most well-known politician is death-metal rocker Freddy Lim, who unseated a veteran lawmaker to win a seat in January’s election. “Rather than attempting to suppress democracy in Taiwan and Hong Kong, we hope the Beijing government can spend the time to consider democratis­ation of its domestic society,” said NPP’s Huang Kuo-chang at the forum. — AFP

 ??  ?? TAIPEI: Pro-Taiwan and China unificatio­n activists chant slogans outside a venue during a political forum hosted by Taiwan’s New Power Party (NPP) in Taipei yesterday.—AFP
TAIPEI: Pro-Taiwan and China unificatio­n activists chant slogans outside a venue during a political forum hosted by Taiwan’s New Power Party (NPP) in Taipei yesterday.—AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait