The Borneo Post

Taiwan activists fan China fears as protest trial opens

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TAIPEI: Anti- China activists told a court in Taiwan that their weeks-long protest campaign last year saved the island from further economic colonisati­on by Beijing, in defence statements given at the start of their trial yesterday.

The protests, dubbed the “Sunflower Movement”, marked the largest display of anti- China sentiment seen in Taiwan for years and followed nearly a decade of rapprochem­ent between the two historical foes.

Some 119 activists stand accused of stirring public unrest and attacking police during protests aimed at blocking a controvers­ial trade deal that Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeou had signed with China.

“What would Taiwan be like now if we hadn’t organised those protests?” Chen Wei-ting, one of eight main protest leaders on trial, told the court. “All these industries - publishing, telecoms, tourism - would have been bought up by large Chinese interests.”

President Ma, who is in the final year of his second four-year term, has overseen the signing of several pacts aimed at building economic ties in sectors ranging from finance to tourism.

Opponents launched the protest movement after accusing Ma of trying to ram through legislatio­n for a far-reaching services-trade pact without public consultati­on in March of last year.

Before the pact could become law hundreds of protesters led by Chen and others forced their way into Taiwan’s parliament and repelled police efforts to evict them.

The pact, which has still to be ratified, would have opened 64 of Taiwan’s service sectors to China and 80 of China’s sectors to Taiwan.

Opponents say it would have accelerate­d political reconcilia­tion, a key goal of China’s foreign policy. Last September, China’s President Xi Jinping reiterated the “One Country, Two Systems” principle for bringing Taiwan back under Chinese rule. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Student leaders of Taiwan’s ‘Sunflower Movement’ Lin Fei-fan (right) and Chen Wei-ting talk to reporters at the Taipei District court. — Reuters
Student leaders of Taiwan’s ‘Sunflower Movement’ Lin Fei-fan (right) and Chen Wei-ting talk to reporters at the Taipei District court. — Reuters

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