Manila Standard

‘I am Taiwanese’: China threat toughens island’s identity

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AT A barbed-wire museum where political prisoners were once held, visitors lauded Taiwan’s modernday democracy shaped by its own national identity on the island across from authoritar­ian China.

Taipei’s Jing-Mei White Terror Memorial Park is a stark reminder of the island’s history as a one-party state under the Kuomintang nationalis­ts who fled to Taiwan at the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949.

Secretive courts tried those accused of assisting the Communists across the Taiwan Strait.

“I heard people were arrested for protesting against the government,” said office worker Mars Hung, after his visit to the grey-walled former military school commemorat­ing the crackdown between 1947 and 1987.

“We are so much freer now,” the 24-year-old said. “To me, Taiwan stands for democracy. We don’t have so many restrictio­ns like China. It’s a blessing to be Taiwanese, to have our free and democratic way of life.”

The island now faces an authoritar­ian threat from Xi Jinping’s government which has vowed to annex its smaller neighbor.

China views Taiwan as part of its territory and Beijing has conducted several rounds of war games around the self-ruled island in the last year.

Xi says Taiwan’s people -- the majority of whom have roots in mainland China -- are Chinese and are betraying their heritage by hanging on to independen­ce.

But locals on Taiwan’s main island say they are their own people in a sovereign nation that has forged a unique identity defined by democratic ideals.

“I was born in Taiwan and I live in Taiwan so I am Taiwanese,” said Jing-Mei museum worker Angela Hung, 50. “It’s a free and peaceful place... I hope to continue our current way of living.”

The decades-long threat from Beijing has only strengthen­ed the island’s distinct—and separate— identity among its 23 million people, said history student Rick Lai, who was snapping graduation photos at Taipei’s Liberty Square.

“This sense of insecurity is making Taiwanese more and more aware of who they are,” the 22-yearold told AFP.

“The constant threat has made Taiwanese ask themselves ‘who are we, what are we, what are we defending?’”

Some in Taiwan believe their historic bond with those living across the strait cannot be ignored and say the island’s democracy is the only noticeable difference

‘Free and peaceful’

Polling from the island’s Election Study Center shows that around 60 percent of residents feel distinctly Taiwanese—three times as many as in the 1990s.

Attachment to Chinese identity has fallen dramatical­ly from 25 percent to less than 3 percent, while around a third feel both Taiwanese and Chinese.

Just a shade over one percent want to see the island unified with mainland China and the overwhelmi­ng majority reject the idea of falling under the shadow of the Chinese Communist Party.

While opposition to China can be a motivating factor, University of Missouri’s Sydney Yueh, who authored a book on Taiwan’s identity politics and culture, said the island’s “political reformatio­n” has put in place the roots for a more open and prosperous society.

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