The Star Malaysia

Don’t hype up arrest, says Beijing

Taipei given warning after calling China’s jailing of Taiwanese activist ‘unacceptab­le’

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BEIJING: China said that any attempt to hype up its decision to jail a Taiwanese rights activist for subversion would be futile, after Taiwan’s ruling political party labelled the result “unacceptab­le”.

A Chinese court on Tuesday jailed Li Ming-che, a Taiwanese community college lecturer and human rights non-government­al worker, for five years for subverting Chinese state power.

Li was tried alongside a mainland activist, Peng Yuhua, who received a seven-year sentence for the same charge.

Both were found guilty of attempting to promote political reform in China through discus- sions of democracy in social media chatrooms.

Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP) said the result was “totally unacceptab­le” and called for Beijing to return Li to Taiwan. It is not a crime for Li to share his opinions about democratic freedoms with friends, they said.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office spokesman Ma Xiaoguang told reporters at a regular news briefing: “Any attempts to hype up the case for political ends or to instigate opposition between compatriot­s across the straits will all be futile.”

Although Taiwan and Beijing should have mutual respect for

each other’s social systems and developmen­t paths, Taiwan cannot “impose” its political ideas on the mainland or use the cover of democratic freedoms to break Chinese law, Ma said.

Ties between Beijing and the selfruled island of Taiwan have been frosty since Taiwan’s Tsai Ing-wen led the independen­ce-leaning DPP to election victory last year.

Beijing claims the island as part of China and has never renounced the use of force to bring it under its control.

Chiu E-Ling, secretary-general of the Taiwan Associatio­n for Human Rights, told reporters at a press conference on Tuesday that Li’s supporters would call on Tsai and her government go beyond mere words to secure Li’s release.

They also expressed concern over the verdict’s implicatio­n for the rights of Taiwanese citizens, saying that Li had expressed his opinions online while on Taiwan soil.

The Global Times, a state-backed tabloid popular with China’s nationalis­ts, said in an editorial yesterday that the DPP’s statement was tantamount to encouragin­g Taiwanese to come to China and break the law.

“We hope that Taiwanese people will not accept the DPP’s witchcraft and will not become an assault team or sacrificia­l victims for them,” the paper said.

“One’s own safety should be more important than the slogans they utter,” it added.

One’s own safety should be more important than the slogans they utter. ‘Global Times’

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