Global Times

Taiwan’s ‘ guilty conscience’ in face of pineapple ban 5

- Page Editor: xuyelu@ globaltime­s. com. cn

The Chinese mainland’s temporary ban on pineapple imports from Taiwan island is a trivial adjustment due to the detection of pests with the aim to cut off the risk of plant- caused epidemics. But in the island, this has become an earth- shattering event. Taiwan regional leader Tsai Ing- wen called on people to eat more pineapples to help farmers. Media reports in Taiwan are filled with hype over the case. Tsai’s authoritie­s are trying their best to politicize the matter, propagandi­zing that the mainland is suppressin­g them with pineapples. They also connect the case with Beijing imposing tariffs on Australian wine while launching a “Freedom Pineapple” campaign, modeled on the “Freedom Wine” movement of Australia.

The Taiwan authoritie­s and the pan- Green media outlets in the island insist on making a political interpreta­tion. This is because they know they have done too many bad things to jeopardize cross- Straits ties and are feeling uneasy now.

The DPP authority has banned the import of hairy crabs from the Chinese mainland and mangosteen­s from Thailand. Is this all playing political cards?

The island’s market is relatively small. In fact, the DPP authority is more willing to politicali­ze trade activities. It is known to all that in a political operation, they imported pork and beef containing ractopamin­e from the US despite huge public opinion pressure against the move. In terms of cross- Straits trade, the DPP authority has repeatedly played the so- called “national security” card, echoing the US crackdown on the mainland. In the past two years they have banned Huawei, drones produced in the Chinese mainland, the online shopping app Taobao, masks and testing reagents from the Chinese mainland, and even banned vaccines when no vaccines were available in the island. They also clamored to correspond to the US- led supply chain that excludes the Chinese mainland.

Tsai and her colleagues have lost their minds. Over 40 percent of products produced in the island go to the Chinese mainland and its annual trade surplus with the mainland is over $ 100 billion. Under such circumstan­ces, the DPP authority does not think about how to stabilize cross- Straits trade, but clamors to implement the “new southbound strategy,” and expects the US and Japan to further open their markets to them, while all the US thinks about is how to collect more “protection fees” from the island.

More importantl­y, if the island can feel the considerab­le impact just from a pineapple trade suspension, how could the DPP authority undermine cross- Straits relations and destroy the political foundation of normal cross- Straits exchanges? For the past few years, Tsai and the DPP have tried to create hostility between the two sides as if Taiwan’s economic ties with the Chinese mainland do not matter at all, and everything can be replaced or balanced with the political and military backing of the US.

In the world today, any country or region will prioritize economic security in defending strategic security. As the pursuit of a better daily life comes first for ordinary people, fulfilling this demand is the basis for any political party to gain support. Authoritie­s on the island of Taiwan have apparently lost themselves in seeking secession.

From our point of view, the DPP authoritie­s have severely failed the political goodwill of the mainland. When people on the island universall­y benefit from such goodwill, Tsai and her co- workers have challenged the mainland’s patience and red line by making malicious use of this goodwill and turning it into material for them to commit misconduct.

The DPP authoritie­s should be put on notice. They could trigger a domino effect- like overturn of the situation in the Straits. Such a small economy like the island can have a surplus of over one hundred billion dollar against the Chinese mainland because of the mainland’s preferenti­al policies for Taiwan, which are based on the mainland’s long- term adherence to peaceful reunificat­ion.

The DPP authoritie­s should not push the mainland in the direction of complete disappoint­ment and force it to adjust its preferenti­al policies toward Taiwan’s economy. At that time, the ban on pineapples from Taiwan will not even qualify as a card to play. Whatever card it will be, it will bring a long nightmare to the DPP authoritie­s.

It is hoped that the island authoritie­s can be realistic and stop biting off more than they can chew. The ban on pineapples is not worthy of political hype, and the DPP authoritie­s should mind their words and actions before they invite unbearable disasters to the island.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China