The Borneo Post

Taiwan opposition picks former VP Wu as party chief

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TAIPEI: Taiwan’s biggest opposition group, the Chinafrien­dly Nationalis­ts, on Saturday picked as its chief the island’s former vice president Wu Denyih, an advocate of improved and stable cross-strait relations.

In his acceptance speech, Wu, 69, said the party would need to implement measures to boost the economy such as by increasing incomes and implementi­ng pension reforms.

The Nationalis­ts, also known as the Kuomintang ( KMT), once governed all of China, but fled to Taiwan in 1949 after being defeated in a civil war with China’s Communists.

The KMT and Beijing have always recognised Taiwan as part of China, but the two disagree on who rules ‘one China’.

The KMT says Taipei is the ruler, while China says the Communist party in Beijing is the legitimate government of ‘one China’.

Because of this, the KMT has been struggling to stay relevant after bruising electoral defeats to the ruling independen­ce-leaning party, which rose to power last year on an electorate increasing­ly hostile to China.

Chinese President Xi Jinping sent a message of congratula­tions to Wu, saying he hoped the two parties keep in mind the wellbeing of people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait and firmly oppose Taiwan independen­ce, state news agency Xinhua reported.

Wu, a former Taiwan vice president in the previous administra­tion and a party senior, hails from central Nantou County.

A legislator for many years, Wu takes over from current party chair Hung Hsiu- chu in August, having won 52.24 percent of the votes, which were split among six candidates.

He now faces the task of fostering the next generation of party leadership. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Military trucks carry soldiers through central Pyongyang before sunset in this file photo. — Reuters photo
Military trucks carry soldiers through central Pyongyang before sunset in this file photo. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Wu (centre) speaks during a news conference in Taipei. — Reuters photo
Wu (centre) speaks during a news conference in Taipei. — Reuters photo

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