The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Taiwan’s former leader Lee Teng-hui, aged 97

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Former Taiwanese president Lee Teng-hui, who oversaw the island’s transition to full democracy, has died aged 97, according to local media reports. Mr Lee brought direct elections and other democratic changes to the self-governed island despite missile launches and other fierce sabre-rattling by China. He strove to create a separate, nonChinese identity for Taiwan, angering not only China, which considers the island part of its territory, but also members of his Nationalis­t Party who hoped to return victorious to the mainland. Mr Lee later openly endorsed formal independen­ce for the island but illness in his later years prompted him to largely withdraw from public life. Physically imposing and charismati­c, Mr Lee spanned Taiwan’s modern history and was native to the island, unlike many who arrived with Chiang Kai-shek in 1949, at the end of the Chinese civil war. At times gruff, at times personable, he left little doubt he was the man in charge in almost any setting. “A leader must be tough and strong enough so he can put an end to disputes and chaotic situations,” he wrote in his autobiogra­phy. He was born in a farming community near Taipei on January 15 1923, near the mid-point of Japan’s half-century colonial rule. The son of a Japanese police aide, he volunteere­d in the Imperial Japanese Army and returned to Taiwan as a newly commission­ed second lieutenant to help man an anti-aircraft battery. He earned degrees in Japan and Taiwan, as well as at Iowa State University and Cornell University in New York. He worked for the US-sponsored Commission on Rural Reconstruc­tion, which sought to encourage land reform and modernise Taiwanese agricultur­e. In 1971, Mr Lee joined the governing Nationalis­t Party. As a descendant of the people who migrated to the island from China in the 17th and 18th centuries, he was part of the party’s effort to broaden its base beyond the 1949 arrivals from the mainland. He was Taipei mayor, Taiwan province governor and vice-president before succeeding to the presidency in 1988. In his early years as president, Mr Lee met significan­t resistance from Nationalis­t hardliners who favoured the party’s tradition of mainlander domination and resented Mr Lee’s native status. He beat back the resistance, largely by giving his detractors important political positions.

 ??  ?? Lee Teng-hui left little doubt he was the man in charge in almost any setting.
Lee Teng-hui left little doubt he was the man in charge in almost any setting.

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