Manila Bulletin

Taiwan reunificat­ion with China ‘inevitable’ — Xi

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BEIJING (AFP) — Taiwan’s unificatio­n with the mainland is ‘’inevitable’’, President Xi Jinping said Wednesday, warning against any efforts to promote the island’s independen­ce and saying China would not renounce the option of using military force to bring it into the fold.

China still sees democratic Taiwan as part of its territory to be reunified, despite the two sides being ruled separately since the end of a civil war on the mainland in 1949.

‘’China must and will be united... which is an inevitable requiremen­t for the great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese people in the new era,’’ Xi said in a speech commemorat­ing the 40th anniversar­y of a message sent to Taiwan in 1979, in which Beijing called for unificatio­n and an end to military confrontat­ion.

‘’We make no promise to give up the use of military force and reserve the option of taking all necessary means’’ against Taiwanese separatist activities and ‘’outside forces’’ that interfere with reunificat­ion, he said.

In his speech, Xi described unifica- tion under a ‘’one country, two systems’’ approach that would ‘’safeguard the interests and well-being of Taiwanese compatriot­s’’.

Taiwan considers itself a sovereign state, with its own currency, political and judicial systems, but has never declared formal independen­ce from the mainland.

Relations have been strained for the past two years since the election of President Tsai Ing-wen, who has refused to acknowledg­e Beijing’s stance that the island is part of ‘’one China’’.

On Tuesday, Tsai warned Beijing that Taiwan’s people would never give up the kind of freedoms unseen on the authoritar­ian mainland.

Beijing ‘’must respect the insistence of 23 million people for freedom and democracy’’ and ‘’must use peaceful and equal terms to handle our difference­s’’, she said.

To accommodat­e difference­s in Taiwan’s political system and civil society, China has proposed adopting the ‘’one country, two systems’’ policy, which was implemente­d in Hong Kong after the British handed the city back to China in 1997.

Last year, Taiwan’s ruling party suffered a massive defeat in mid-term polls, causing Tsai to resign as leader of the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party, while the main opposition Kuomintang, which oversaw an unpreceden­ted thaw with Beijing before Tsai took office in 2016, made gains.

Beijing has adopted a multi-pronged approach to diminish Taiwan’s presence on the internatio­nal stage in recent years, including blocking it from global forums and poaching its dwindling number of official diplomatic allies.

China has also successful­ly pressured global firms to list Taiwan as part of China on their company websites.

 ??  ?? INEVITABLE - China’s President Xi Jinping speaks during an event to commemorat­e the 40th anniversar­y of the Message to Compatriot­s in Taiwan at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on January 2, 2019. (AFP)
INEVITABLE - China’s President Xi Jinping speaks during an event to commemorat­e the 40th anniversar­y of the Message to Compatriot­s in Taiwan at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on January 2, 2019. (AFP)

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