The Borneo Post

Taiwan protesters scuffle with police over China flight route

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TAIPEI: Taiwanese protesters scuffled with police yesterday ahead of China’s launch of a controvers­ial flight route, which they say has been allowed to go ahead despite fears over security risks.

The route over the Taiwan Strait is due to be inaugurate­d on Sunday, despite a backlash over security concerns.

Around 40 protesters entered the lobby of the headquarte­rs of the Mainland Affairs Council ( MAC) — Taiwan’s top China policy-making body — in the capital Taipei to voice their anger. The demonstrat­ion comes as fears grow over increasing influence from Beijing.

“The Chinese side unilateral­ly drew up the M503 route and the MAC failed to defend Taiwan’s sovereignt­y to agree to it. We demand M503 be retracted as it posts security concerns for Taiwan,” said protest spokesman Lin Yu-lun.

Protesters scuffled briefly with police before being forced outside where they gathered until a MAC representa­tive accepted a protest letter. There were no arrests, police said.

M503 is one of four routes which would take planes over the Taiwan Strait from China’s coastal province of Zhejiang and the cities of Fuzhou and Xiamen in Fujian province.

Beijing says they are necessary to ease congestion on an existing f lightpath. But Taiwan’s authoritie­s have slammed the unilateral move and said it poses a potential air defence threat.

The route was originally due to be launched on March 5, but was postponed due to those objections. China later slightly modified M503 but is pressing ahead with the launch.

The other three routes have been indefinite­ly postponed, according to Taiwan’s Civil Aeronautic­s Administra­tion. — AFP

 ??  ?? Pro-Taiwan independen­ce activists are forced out from the lobby of the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) by police during a protest in Taipei. — AFP photo
Pro-Taiwan independen­ce activists are forced out from the lobby of the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) by police during a protest in Taipei. — AFP photo

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