The Borneo Post

Xi: China ready to ‘defeat’ Taiwan independen­ce

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BEIJING: Chinese President Xi Jinping delivered a stern warning to Taiwan yesterday, saying that Beijing has the will and power to thwart any attempts at independen­ce.

Addressing a twice- a- decade gathering of the Communist Party in Beijing, Xi warned that China has “the resolve, the confidence, and the ability to defeat separatist attempts for Taiwan independen­ce in any form”.

“We will never allow anyone, any organisati­on, or any political party, at any time or in any form, to separate any part of Chinese territory from China,” he said.

Ties between Taiwan and China have turned increasing­ly frosty since the election of Tsai Ing-wen as president last year.

Beijing cut off official communicat­ion with her government shortly after it took office due to her refusal to publicly accept the “one China” concept.

Tsai also angered Beijing when she called Donald Trump to congratula­te him on his US presidenti­al election victory.

Under Taiwan’s previous government the two sides had stuck to the ‘ 1992 consensus’, in which they agree there is only one China without specifying which is its rightful representa­tive.

In his speech, Xi held out an olive branch to the island’s leadership, offering to restore communicat­ion with Taiwan if its government readopts the understand­ing.

Then “no political party or group in Taiwan will have any difficulty conducting exchanges with the mainland”, he said.

The two sides split after a civil war in 1949, and while Taiwan sees itself as a sovereign nation, it has never formally declared independen­ce.

Cross- strait tensions were further exacerbate­d by a highly unusual call from Tsai to congratula­te then US Presidente­lect Donald Trump.

Xi made no mention of independen­ce movements in China’s semi- autonomous city Hong Kong.

“We will develop and strengthen the ranks of patriots who l ove both our country and their regions,” he said, adding that “patriots will be playing the principal role” in governing the metropolis, which operates under its own system of laws as part of the “One Country, Two Systems” policy.

Beijing has tightened control over the city’s affairs in response to high- profile calls for democracy that have increasing­ly turned to calls for self- determinat­ion or even full independen­ce. — AFP

 ??  ?? A man watches a broadcast of Xi delivering his speech during the opening of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, at an electronic­s store in Liuzhou, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. — Reuters photo
A man watches a broadcast of Xi delivering his speech during the opening of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, at an electronic­s store in Liuzhou, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. — Reuters photo

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