The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Taiwan’s next president among Time ‘Most Influentia­l’

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TAIPEI: Taiwan’s incoming president Lai Ching-te has made Time Magazine’s list of the ‘100 Most Influentia­l People of 2024’, which the island hailed yesterday as a recognitio­n of its ‘democratic achievemen­ts’.

Vice-President Lai, who won the January presidenti­al election to succeed Tsai Ing-wen, will take office on May 20 at a time of growing tensions between Taiwan and China.

Beijing claims the self-ruled island as part of its territory and has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control.

China has ramped up military and political pressure in recent years and has denounced Lai as a ‘dangerous separatist’ because he - like Tsai - refuses to acknowledg­e Beijing’s claim.

“(T)he health of the island’s 23 million inhabitant­s is just one part of a much larger task he is inheriting: ensuring his government’s very survival, amid China’s amped-up campaign to reclaim the nascent democracy,” Jon Huntsman, a former governor of Utah and one-time US ambassador to China, wrote in Time.

He added Taiwan’s ‘risk profile couldn’t be higher’.

Taiwan’s Presidenti­al Office praised Lai’s entry to the list, calling it an ‘important recognitio­n from the internatio­nal community to the democratic achievemen­ts’ of the Taiwanese people.

It added Lai would ‘bear the crucial responsibi­lity of safeguardi­ng Taiwan’s democracy’.

Also making Time’s list of the influentia­l was Chinese Premier Li Qiang, who ascended to the country’s number-two position last year.

Tsai made the list in 2020, with Republican senator Ted Cruz calling her a ‘signal light casting out China’s looming shadow, conveying to the world that Taiwan will not acquiesce to the Chinese Communist Party’. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Jokowi (second right) speaking to Wang Yi (third left) at the Merdeka Palace in Jakarta.
— AFP photo Jokowi (second right) speaking to Wang Yi (third left) at the Merdeka Palace in Jakarta.

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