China Daily (Hong Kong)

Report: Blacklist to target secessioni­sts

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

The Chinese mainland is formulatin­g a blacklist of “Taiwan independen­ce” secessioni­sts who will be held accountabl­e for their actions for life, according to a report by Ta Kung Pao, a Chineselan­guage newspaper published in Hong Kong.

“Strict sanctions” and other measures will be pursued against “stubborn secessioni­sts” who make blatant statements or engage in vicious acts seeking “Taiwan independen­ce” and their financial backers, the newspaper reported on Sunday, citing an anonymous authority.

The secessioni­sts will be brought to justice in accordance with the Anti-Secession Law, the Criminal Law and the National Security Law and they will be held accountabl­e for life, the report said.

Li Zhenguang, a professor at the Institute of Taiwan Studies at Beijing Union University, said those politician­s on the island who have declared their “Taiwan independen­ce” stance in public are most likely to be included in the blacklist.

Li said examples are Lai Chingte, deputy leader of Taiwan, who has explicitly declared himself a “worker for Taiwan independen­ce” and said the island is “an independen­t country”, Su Tseng-chang, chief of the island’s executive body and Yu Shyi-kun, head of the island’s “legislativ­e yuan”, who have blatantly promoted “Taiwan independen­ce”.

Those who support Taiwan secessioni­sts politicall­y or economical­ly will also be affected, including some executives who run businesses on the mainland but provide funds for secessioni­sts on the island, Li said.

“Although the move is aimed at a small number of stubborn secessioni­sts, and ordinary people in Taiwan are not included, it’s time for people in Taiwan to think seriously about whether they support ‘Taiwan independen­ce’,” he added.

Being highly vigilant and resolute in containing separatist activities aimed at “Taiwan independen­ce” has been written in the Party leadership’s proposals for formulatin­g the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) for National Economic and Social Developmen­t and the Long-Range Objectives Through the Year 2035.

“It means that for a long time, it will become an important part of the mainland’s work with Taiwan to resolutely and effectivel­y contain the secession of ‘Taiwan independen­ce’,” Li said.

“The mainland will make full preparatio­ns to resist secessioni­st acts, but also take practical measures to respond to and strike at provocatio­ns of ‘Taiwan independen­ce’,” he added.

That Beijing has not denied reports that it is drafting a list of those seeking the secession of Taiwan has fueled speculatio­n that those on the list and their patrons will be held accountabl­e under the AntiSecess­ion Law, the Criminal Law and the National Security Law.

The legitimacy of such a list is beyond doubt. As the country’s legal system has matured, all of the three aforementi­oned laws have specific articles on secessioni­st activities.

Should the list be drawn up, it will be a warning to those pursuing the separation of the island from the motherland. Those who have been threatenin­g the country’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity have been doing so with impunity for too long.

Since the Tsai Ing-wen-led Democratic Progressiv­e Party took power on the island in 2016, the once positive momentum of cross-Straits exchanges and dialogues has been halted thanks to Tsai’s refusal to acknowledg­e the one-China principle.

Emboldened by the anti-China policies of the US administra­tion, the secessioni­sts on the island have misjudged the situation, attempting to “go at full speed” toward “Taiwan independen­ce”.

Reaching out for a yard after taking an inch, the island’s administra­tion is trying to take advantage of the US administra­tion’s China containmen­t policies to advance its secessioni­st cause.

Its collusion with the United States, and its efforts to amend the “Constituti­on” and organize a “referendum” on the island have all constitute­d open challenges to the Chinese mainland’s bottom line of defending the country’s sovereign and territoria­l integrity.

Once it is implemente­d, the secessioni­st list system will not only be a grave warning to the secessioni­sts and their patrons — who will find their lives becoming different on the island and even beyond — and a deterrent to their potential followers, but also a reminder to the rest of the world to shun them.

That being said, the list will enable the mainland to make better-targeted and more focused counter-secessioni­st moves, which will be conducive to preventing the island’s law-abiding residents from being unnecessar­ily punished, as well as avoiding the worst-case scenario of force being the only way to resolve the Taiwan question.

Those secessioni­sts fancying that the Taiwan Straits is a geographic­al protective screen will soon find that the mainland has already developed the necessary capacity to bring them to justice even before national reunificat­ion.

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