Taipei Times

Ma urges Tsai to visit Itu Aba, against NSB advice

- BY SHELLEY SHAN STAFF REPORTER

Former President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) yesterday said that he hoped President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) would reconsider her decision to not visit Itu Aba Island (Taiping Island,太平島) before her term ends.

Taiping, the largest of the Spratly Islands (Nansha Islands,南沙群島), lies 1,600km southwest of Kaohsiung, and is administer­ed by the city’s Cijin District (旗津). It hosts about 200 coast guard personnel trained by the Marine Corps, and is also claimed by China, the Philippine­s and Vietnam.

Chinese Nationalis­t Party (KMT) lawmakers have called on Tsai to visit the island to reaffirm Taiwan’s sovereignt­y, following the completion of a dredging project to allow larger vessels to dock.

The National Security Bureau has advised Tsai not to visit the island due to difficulti­es in maintainin­g the security of the head of state during the visit, amid rising geopolitic­al conflicts in the South China Sea.

In a Facebook post yesterday, Ma said he disagreed with the assessment, adding that flight safety and security concerns had already existed when he and former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) visited the island.

“If former president Chen and I could handle these issues, so can President Tsai. It is not a technical issue that cannot be resolved,” Ma wrote.

He visited the island about four

“It is crucial that the president

personally

inspects Taiping

Island to show

our clear position

on Taiwan’s

sovereignt­y over ” the island. — Ma Ying-jeou, former president

months before his second term ended in 2016, despite opposition from Taiwan’s allies, as he was determined to visit to declare Taiwan’s sovereignt­y over the island and deliver the South China Sea Peace Initiative (南海和平倡議), he said, adding that the move contribute­d to regional peace.

“I have done my part in advising the president and would respect her decision. However, from the perspectiv­e of national interests, it is crucial that the president personally inspects Taiping Island to show our clear position on Taiwan’s sovereignt­y over the island, and to boost the morale of the general public as well as the troops stationed on the island,” Ma said.

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