The Asian Age

China won’t give up Taiwan position

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Beijing, Oct. 23: Chinese people have a “sacred mission” to ensure Taiwan is always considered part of China, a top Chinese leader said on Friday ahead of the 70th anniversar­y of Japan giving up control of Taiwan at the end of World War Two.

Taiwan was a Japanese colony from 1895- 1945 and the then- Nationalis­t government of China took over rule of the island after Japan lost the war. Japan had gained control of the island from imperial China.

But the Nationalis­ts had to flee to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war with the Communists, who to this day insist the island is an integral part of China and have never renounced the use of force to bring it under Beijing’s control.

Speaking at an event in Beijing to mark the anniversar­y, Yu Zhengsheng, the party’s fourth- ranked leader, said Taiwan’s “recovery” had “washed away the national shame” of repeated foreign invasions of China.

Since 1949, the reality that the mainland and Taiwan were part of one China had never changed, Mr Yu said, in comments carried by the official Xinhua news agency.

“Maintainin­g the coun- try’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, and maintainin­g no changes to the position that Taiwan is part of China is a sacred mission for all the sons and daughters of China,” he added.

Many people in proudly democratic Taiwan look with concern at autocratic China, and there is little support for the two to join up any time soon.

Many Taiwanese also have a broadly more positive view of Japan than people in China or Korea, saying that Japan’s rule brought progress to an undevelope­d island.

Taiwan will mark what it calls Retrocessi­on Day on Sunday at an event overseen by Taiwan President Ma Ying- jeou.

Taiwan will elect a new president in January, and the frontrunne­r is Tsai Ing- wen from the main opposition Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP), which has traditiona­lly favoured Taiwan’s formal independen­ce.

The DPP says it believes only the island’s people can decide its future. Beijing takes this to mean it wants independen­ce.

Mr Yu did not directly mention the election, but said people in China and Taiwan must both oppose any move to upset ties.

 ?? — AP ?? US First Lady Michelle Obama ( right) stands with Mariam Safdar, daughter of Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, as she speaks at an event in the Blue Room of the White House in Washington DC on Thursday. Michelle Obama announced a new partnershi­p to...
— AP US First Lady Michelle Obama ( right) stands with Mariam Safdar, daughter of Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, as she speaks at an event in the Blue Room of the White House in Washington DC on Thursday. Michelle Obama announced a new partnershi­p to...

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