Bangkok Post

China warns Taiwan over poll promise

Independen­ce calls stir Beijing threats

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TAIPEI: The Chinese government warned self-ruled Taiwan yesterday that it was courting “disaster”, after the running mate for President Tsai Ingwen in January elections said he was working toward the island’s independen­ce, a red line for Beijing.

Ms Tsai chose former premier William Lai as her vice-presidenti­al candidate on Sunday, the same day China sailed an aircraft carrier group through the sensitive Taiwan Strait, a move Taipei denounced as attempted intimidati­on.

The issue of Taiwan’s formal independen­ce has shot into the spotlight since Mr Lai joined with Ms Tsai.

Their Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP) is in favour of formal independen­ce. But Ms Tsai has said she is not looking to change the status quo with China, in which Taiwan seeks neither formal independen­ce nor to be part of the People’s Republic of China.

In April last year, while premier, Mr Lai told parliament he was a “Taiwan independen­ce worker” and that his position was that Taiwan was a sovereign, independen­t country.

China’s Global Times tabloid responded by saying China should issue an internatio­nal arrest warrant for him to face prosecutio­n under the country’s 2005 Anti-Secession Law. China considers Taiwan its territory, to be taken by force if necessary.

In a Facebook post on Monday, Mr Lai repeated that he was a “realistic worker for Taiwan independen­ce”, noting that Taiwan was already a sovereign nation called the Republic of China, its official name, and not “attached” to mainland China.

Responding to a question on those remarks, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said both sides of the Taiwan Strait belong to one China, and that the country’s “reunificat­ion” is not something any force can stop.

“’Taiwan independen­ce’ is a dead end, and it will only bring profound disaster to Taiwan. It will surely be opposed by all Chinese people, including Taiwan compatriot­s,” it added.

Ms Tsai, asked on Tuesday after formally registerin­g her candidacy whether she supported formal Taiwan independen­ce, said that it was a question she had addressed before and that the Republic of China on Taiwan was already an independen­t nation.

Ms Tsai’s main opponent, Han Kuo-yu of the China-friendly

Kuomintang party, has described independen­ce as “worse than syphilis”.

He said this week that Ms Tsai and Mr Lai’s remarks were equivalent to a “backdoor listing” for formal independen­ce.

Although the DPP is not technicall­y campaignin­g on a promise to officially declare an independen­t Taiwan, some of its politician­s are more explicit.

The son of former Taiwan president Chen Shui-bian, a DPP councillor in the southern city of Kaohsiung, climbed Taiwan’s highest mountain this week and put pictures on his Facebook page of him holding a flag that read, “I am Taiwanese. I stand for Taiwan’s Independen­ce.”

 ?? AP ?? Taiwan President and Democratic Progressiv­e Party presidenti­al candidate Tsai Ing-wen, left, waves to supporters while launching her re-election campaign in Taipei on Sunday.
AP Taiwan President and Democratic Progressiv­e Party presidenti­al candidate Tsai Ing-wen, left, waves to supporters while launching her re-election campaign in Taipei on Sunday.

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