Qatar Tribune

Taiwan won’t bow to Chinese pressure: Tsai

Tsai’s comments came one day after Chinese leader Xi Jinping reiterated his goal of unifying Taiwan

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IN a National Day address on Sunday, president Tsai Ingwen stressed Taiwan’s commitment to resisting annexation or encroachme­nt upon its sovereignt­y and warned of China’s growing threat.

China and Taiwan “should not be subordinat­e to each other,” Tsai said in a ceremony down-sized due to anticorona­virus measures.

“We hope for an easing of cross-strait relations and will not act rashly, but there should be absolutely no illusions that the Taiwanese people will bow to pressure,” Tsai said.

Tsai’s comments came one day after Chinese leader

i Jinping reiterated his goal of unifying Taiwan.

Taiwan has had an independen­t government since Chinese Nationalis­ts fled there in 1949 after losing a civil war to the Communists.

Beijing considers the selfgovern­ing democracy part of its territory. i has been ramping up talk of annexing the island that sits about 160 kilometres off the coast of south-eastern China.

Fears of conflict escalated with the incursion of 150 Chinese military aircraft into Taiwan’s air defence zone between October 1 and 5, a provocatio­n that raised alarm across the region and in Washington, a key military ally of Taiwan’s.

On Sunday, China sent

three warplanes, including two J-16 fighter jets and one Yun-8 aircraft, to Taiwan’s south-western air defence zone, according to Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defence.

Tsai said Taiwan’s future must be decided in accordance with the will of the Taiwanese people and called on Beijing to engage in dialogue on the basis of parity.

“We will continue to bolster our national defence and demonstrat­e our determinat­ion to defend ourselves in order to ensure that nobody can force Taiwan to take the

path China has laid out for us ... as it offers neither a free

and democratic way of life for Taiwan, nor sovereignt­y for our 23 million people.” “We will do our utmost to prevent the status quo from being unilateral­ly altered,” Tsai said, adding that the situation in the region is becoming more tense and complex by the day.

“Free and democratic countries around the world have been alerted to the expansion of authoritar­ianism, with Taiwan standing on democracy’s first line of defence,” Tsai said.

“After taking complete control of Hong Kong and suppressin­g democracy activists, the Beijing authoritie­s also shifted away from the path of political and economic developmen­t that they had followed since ‘reform and opening up’ began decades ago,” Tsai said.

Tsai noted that the G7, NATO, EU and others have all highlighte­d the importance of peace and security in the Taiwan Strait.

“In Washington, Tokyo, Canberra, and Brussels, Taiwan is no longer on the margins, with more and more democratic friends willing to stand up for us,” Tsai said.

Taiwan’s National Day celebratio­ns this year, themed on “Broadening Democratic Alliances and Making Internatio­nal Friendship­s,” also stress its contributi­ons to the world during the Covid-19 pandemic, which did not affect Taiwan’s overall economic growth prospects.

“The face masks we sent out across the world last year showed that Taiwan can help. And the vaccines they sent us this year are vaccines of friendship. This is a virtuous cycle,” Tsai said.

Responding to Tsai’s calling on Beijing to engage in dialogue on the basis of equal footing, Eric Chu, chairman of the Chinese Nationalis­t Party, Taiwan’s main opposition party, stressed his party’s firm stance on cross-strait relations is to “seek common ground while reserving difference­s.”

 ?? (AFP) ?? Taiwan’s president Tsai Ing-wen waves during national day celebratio­ns in Taipei on Sunday.
(AFP) Taiwan’s president Tsai Ing-wen waves during national day celebratio­ns in Taipei on Sunday.

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