Bangkok Post

Less Chinese ‘meddling’ ahead of poll

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Taiwan is seeing less Chinese interferen­ce ahead of its local elections, possibly due to China’s own domestic problems and its efforts to improve its internatio­nal image, Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said yesterday.

Taiwan has accused China, which claims the democratic­ally governed island as its own territory, of repeated efforts to sway the results of its elections, whether by online disinforma­tion campaigns or overt military threats.

Speaking to reporters ahead of Saturday’s elections in Taiwan for mayors and councillor­s, Mr Wu said China was always a factor when Taiwan voted, but this time around Beijing was meddling less.

“I would describe it as that the Chinese interferen­ce in our election is not as prevailing as previous elections,” he said.

The elements not there this time included using cheap air tickets to encourage Taiwanese who live in China to go home to vote for pro-China candidates, or intimidati­ng Taiwan’s people, Mr Wu said.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office did not respond to a request for comment. It has accused Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party of hyping up the threat from China for political gain.

Mr Wu said he did not definitive­ly know why China was being more hands-off with this election, but it could be because Beijing was trying to get its ties with other countries back on track after being criticised for threats against Taiwan. China staged military exercises near Taiwan in August after then-US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taipei. While China’s military activities have continued, they have been at a much reduced scale.

“It is also possible that China is being very busy in dealing with its own domestic problems,” Mr Wu added, referring to issues like China’s Covid-19 lockdowns and property market problems.

The DPP has sought to reframe the vote to show China it won’t be intimidate­d and that the world is watching Taiwan defend its democracy.

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