The Borneo Post

Beijing condemns Taiwan probe into tiny pro-China opposition party

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BEIJING/TAIPEI: China has condemned a Taiwan government probe into a tiny but passionate­ly pro- China opposition party, the latest flashpoint between Beijing and a self-ruled island it considers its own.

Taiwanese investigat­ors searched the homes of four officials from the New Party, which currently has no members of parliament, on Tuesday on suspicion they had violated the National Security Act.

A New Party delegation, including at least one of those whose homes was raided, party spokesman Wang Pingchung, visited China last week as part of a scheduled trip to meet China’s policy-making Taiwan Affairs Office. The New Party has denounced the raids as politicall­y motivated and retributio­n for their opposition to Taiwan independen­ce and support for union with China.

Taiwanese prosecutor­s and the government have not given details of what the party members are suspected of.

Unlike in China, where the legal system is controlled by the ruling Communist Party, democratic Taiwan has an independen­t judiciary.

Taiwan media has reported that the case could be linked to that of Chinese citizen Zhou Hongxu, jailed by a Taiwan court in September for breaching national security laws.

Speaking to reporters in Taipei yesterday, New Party spokesman Wang Ping- chung said he knew Zhou, and that Zhou had attended party events held in the past.

“In 2014, when I successful­ly became a representa­tive of the party, he came to an event to offer his support. Later he participat­ed in our organisati­on events so we of course know him.”

In a short statement released late on Tuesday, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office praised the New Party for its stance in opposing Taiwan independen­ce and upholding the ‘one China’ principle, which states that Taiwan is part of China.

“Recently, the Taiwan authoritie­s have shielded and connived with Taiwan independen­t splittists, and taken various moves to wantonly crack down on and persecute forces and people who uphold peaceful reunificat­ion,” it said.

“We strongly condemn this and are paying close attention to developmen­ts,” the office said.

The New Party broke off from the Nationalis­ts, who once ruled all of China, in 1993. Defeated Nationalis­t forces fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war with the Communists.

Relations between China and Taiwan have soured since Tsai Ing-wen of the pro-independen­ce Democratic Progressiv­e Party won presidenti­al elections last year. China suspects she wants to push for Taiwan’s formal independen­ce.

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