The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Taiwan and China spar over Taiwan premier’s independen­ce remarks

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TAIPEI: Taiwan’s government said yesterday that China was stirring up its media to threaten the self-ruled island after a major state-run newspaper said China should issue an internatio­nal arrest warrant for Taiwan’s premier for his comments on independen­ce.

Taiwan is one of China’s most sensitive issues. The island is claimed by Beijing as its sacred territory and China has never renounced the use of force to bring under Chinese control what it considers to be a wayward province.

China’s hostility to Taiwan has grown since Tsai Ing-wen from the pro-independen­ce Democratic Progressiv­e Party was elected Taiwanese president in 2016. China fears she wants to push for formal independen­ce, though Tsai says she wants to maintain the status quo and is committed to peace.

After Taiwan Premier William Lai told parliament on Friday that he was a ‘Taiwan independen­ce worker’ and that his position was that Taiwan was a sovereign, independen­t country, the widelyread Chinese tabloid the Global Times said he should be prosecuted under China’s 2005 Anti-Secession Law.

“If evidence of his crimes are cast iron, then a global wanted notice can be issued for him,” the paper, published by the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily, wrote on Saturday.

Late on Monday, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office weighed in, saying Lai’s comments were “dangerous and presumptuo­us”, which harm peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait and that Taiwan will never be separated from China.

Taiwan’s China policy-making Mainland Affairs Council said the Global Times and Chinese government’s comments were “intimidati­ng and irrational”.

“Taiwan is a democratic, pluralisti­c society,” it said, adding Lai had consistent­ly followed the president’s policy of maintainin­g peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.

China “has repeatedly manipulate­d the media and socalled ‘internet users’ to threaten and repress Taiwan’s government and people, trying to use military blows and legal threats to violate our dignity and interests”, the council said.

“This is not what a responsibl­e party should be doing. It will only increase cross-strait antagonism and damage relations,” it added.

“Over the past two years, our government has not ‘felt animosity towards China’,” the council said.

“But mainland China must face up to the reality of the separate government­s on both sides of the Taiwan Strait and respect Taiwan’s democracy and will of its people.”

Chinese President Xi Jinping said last month that Taiwan would face the ‘punishment of history’ for any attempt at separatism, offering his strongest warning yet to the island. — Reuters

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