Taiwan is ‘independent’, president warns China
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.