The New Zealand Herald

Support for Taiwanese director over film awards controvers­y

- Yanan Wang in Beijing

Taiwan’s President has expressed her support for the prestigiou­s Golden Horse film awards after a pro-Taiwan independen­ce director’s speech ignited controvers­y in mainland China.

“We have never accepted the term Chinese Taiwan,” Tsai Ing-wen said in a Facebook post. “Taiwan is just Taiwan.”

Director Fu Yue said during her acceptance speech on Saturday in Taipei that her biggest hope was for “our country” to be regarded as an “independen­t entity”. Her film Our Youth in Taiwan won best documentar­y at the awards, which are akin to a Chinese-language Oscars.

Taiwan split from mainland China amid civil war in 1949, but Beijing considers the selfruled island part of its territory.

In recent years, the ruling Communist Party has ratcheted up pressure on other countries to cut diplomatic ties with Taiwan — a prerequisi­te for establishi­ng formal relations with China. Only 17 mainly small, developing countries still recognise Taiwan as a sovereign nation.

Chinese netizens lambasted Fu on the Twitter-like Weibo platform following her win, sharing posts under the hashtag “Not one speck of China can go missing” and a map of China that includes Taiwan and the territorie­s claimed in the South China Sea.

The hashtag was used by high-profile actress Fan Bingbing, who disappeare­d from public life for months this year before being convicted on tax evasion charges in October.

Outraged online commenters also took to Fu’s personal Facebook page, which they littered with derogatory posts.

Facebook is blocked in mainland China and can only be accessed through software that circumvent­s government filters known as the Great Firewall.

Tsai said in her post that the Golden Horse Awards, presented annually in Taipei, highlight the freedoms that set Taiwan apart from China.

“Here [in Taiwan] there aren’t people who will disappear or be silenced for expressing differing viewpoints,” she wrote, “and we also don’t have sensitive terms that are censored on the internet.”

China’s Government cut ties with Tsai’s Administra­tion after her 2016 inaugurati­on and has repeatedly denounced her for refusing its demand that Taiwan is a part of China.

Our Youth in Taiwan follows a young Taiwanese man and a young mainland Chinese woman who are at the centre of student movements in Taiwan.

We have never accepted the term Chinese Taiwan. Taiwan is just Taiwan. Tsai Ing-wen

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 ??  ?? Tsai Ing-wen
Tsai Ing-wen
 ??  ?? Fu Yue
Fu Yue

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