Bangkok Post

Lai names cabinet before inaugurati­on

-

TAIPEI: Taiwanese president-elect Lai Ching-te named his cabinet and security team appointees yesterday as he prepares to take office next month.

China, which claims self-ruled Taiwan as part of its territory and has said it will not renounce the use of force to bring it under its control, has labelled Mr Lai a “dangerous separatist”.

Mr Lai said yesterday the island was “facing unpreceden­ted challenges” ahead of his inaugurati­on on May 20.

“In the face of the rise of authoritar­ianism and China pressing closer, the national security team must not shirk our responsibi­lity, must take the country’s future as our own mission, and must shoulder the duty to defend our country,” he said.

Mr Lai named security council head Wellington Koo as his new defence minister, replacing Chiu Kuo-cheng.

Mr Koo said Taiwan was the “most important link” in maintainin­g regional peace and stability, adding that “we need to take part in the developmen­t of cooperativ­e deterrence”.

“Our primary goal is to complicate the calculatio­ns of the other side of the Strait and to make China’s timetable for potential reckless military actions constantly postponed in order to maintain stability in Taiwan Strait,” he said.

Foreign Minister Joseph Wu will take over as head of the national security council, Mr Lai said.

Lin Chia-lung, the current secretaryg­eneral at the presidenti­al office, will become foreign minister.

Taiwan is separated from China by a narrow 180-kilometre waterway, which serves as a major transit route for the global shipping industry.

China maintains a near-daily military presence around Taiwan, sending warplanes and naval vessels that keep Taipei’s armed forces in a constant state of alert.

The island’s key partner and weapons provider, the United States, approved a multi-billion defence aid package this week that includes replenishi­ng equipment for Taipei’s armed forces as well as “foreign military financing” for Taiwan and other regional countries.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin warned that the strengthen­ing of ties between Taiwan and the United States “will only increase tensions and the risk of conflict across the Taiwan Strait”, and called on Washington to stop arming the island.

But Taipei’s foreign ministry spokesman Jeff Liu said yesterday it was China that had been “stepping up military threats (by) unilateral­ly changing the status quo of the Taiwan Strait”.

“Such internatio­nal concern has proven that the Taiwan Strait issue is absolutely not a Chinese internal affair as China claims,” Mr Liu said.

 ?? AFP ?? Taiwan’s president-elect Lai Ching-te, centre, posing with his new cabinet in Taipei, Taiwan, yesterday.
AFP Taiwan’s president-elect Lai Ching-te, centre, posing with his new cabinet in Taipei, Taiwan, yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand