Mindanao Times

Taiwan is ‘independen­t’, president warns China

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CHINA must accept that Taiwan is already independen­t, President Tsai Ing-wen has said, warning Beijing that any attempt to invade the democratic island would be “very costly”.

Tsai won a second term over the weekend with a record 8.2 million votes, an outcome that was seen as a forceful rebuke of China’s ongoing campaign to isolate the self-ruled island.

China’s leadership had made no secret of its desire to see Tsai turfed out because she and her party refuse to acknowledg­e their view that the island is part of a “one China”.

Beijing regards Taiwan as its own territory and has vowed to one day seize it, by force if necessary -- especially if it declares independen­ce.

But in her first interview since Saturday’s reelection, Tsai said there was no need to formally announce independen­ce because the island already runs itself.

“We don’t have a need to declare ourselves an independen­t state,” she told the BBC.

“We are an independen­t country already and we call ourselves the Republic of China, Taiwan.”

Modern Taiwan has been run separately from the mainland for the last 70 years.

For decades it was a dictatorsh­ip under Chiang Kai-shek’s nationalis­ts following their 1949 defeat to the communists in China’s civil war.

But since the 1980s it morphed into one of Asia’s most progressiv­e democracie­s, although it is only diplomatic­ally recognised by a dwindling handful of countries.

Polls show growing numbers of Taiwanese reject the idea that the island should be part of the Chinese mainland.

“We have a separate identity and we’re a country of our own,” Tsai said.

“We’re a successful democracy, we have a pretty decent economy, we deserve respect from China”.

China has greeted Tsai’s re-election with anger, warning against any move to push the island closer towards independen­ce.

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