Gulf Times

Taiwan expels two Chinese journalist­s over political shows violating regulation­s

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Taiwan expelled two mainland Chinese journalist­s yesterday after a talk show on their channel pushed for Beijing “unifying” with the selfruled island, in the latest sign of deteriorat­ing ties between the two rivals.

The move comes after a spate of tit-for-tat expulsions of reporters between China and the United States, as the two superpower­s spar over trade and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The reporters with China Southeast TV were ordered to leave by yesterday for violating regulation­s covering mainland journalist­s, according to the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC), Taiwan’s top China policy body.

They “are suspected of violating the regulation­s and the authoritie­s have decided not to extend (their permits)... they are scheduled to leave on July 3,” MAC spokesman Chiu Chuicheng told reporters.

Ai Kezhu, one of the deported journalist­s involved in producing the shows, told local media at Taoyuan internatio­nal airport before her departure that they were puzzled by the order.

“We have reported our activities in Taiwan and work content to relevant department­s. We have done that in the past 12 years. We think it’s very strange that there were no problems in the past but now there is this kind of situation,” she said.

The channel has routinely aired pro-Beijing content, but a recent series of shows produced in Taiwan provoked public anger for featuring guests especially vocal in their criticism of Taiwan’s government and who pushed for Beijing “unifying” with the island. “If you enjoy the powers Taiwan has given to belittle and degrade our country and people... we have to ask you to leave because Taiwanese people will not welcome you,” Chen Ting-fei, a lawmaker with the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party, wrote on Facebook.

Unlike authoritar­ian China, which only permits heavily censored state media and routinely harasses foreign reporters, democratic Taiwan has a rambunctio­us free press – although mainland reporters work under heavier restrictio­ns than other journalist­s. Some outlets are vocally pro-Beijing, others deeply critical.

Beijing views Taiwan as its own territory and has vowed to one day seize it, by force if necessary.

Tensions between the sides have grown since Tsai came to power in 2016, as she has refused to acknowledg­e Beijing’s idea that the self-ruled democratic island is part of “one China”.

Tsai, who views Taiwan as de facto independen­t, won a landslide re-election in January in what was seen as a strong rebuke to Beijing’s campaign to isolate the island.

Beijing has ramped up diplomatic and economic pressure on Taiwan as well as increasing military drills near the island, including its military jets breaching Taiwan’s air defence zone with unpreceden­ted frequency in recent weeks.

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