The Daily Telegraph

Lee Teng-hui

Democratic president of Taiwan who held firm against Beijing

- Lee Teng-hui, born January 15 1923, died July 30 2020

LEE TENG-HUI, the former President of Taiwan (aka the Republic of China), who has died aged 97, was his country’s first leader to be elected by popular vote; but his insistence that Taiwan be regarded as a sovereign state led Beijing to damn him “for 1,000 generation­s” and call him a “whore”.

As president from 1988 to 2000, Lee presided over his country’s transforma­tion from one chiefly associated with cheap plastic toys and cut-price computers to one of Asia’s most prosperous democracie­s.

Yet his insistence that Taiwan be treated as an independen­t state posed a political quandary for western nations seeking to improve relations with Beijing, which views Taiwan as a breakaway province and insisted on Lee being treated as an internatio­nal pariah. Taiwan has formal diplomatic relations with only 14 UN member states, not including the US or the UK, both of which recognise Beijing as the sole government of China.

In 1995, when US President Clinton bowed to Congressio­nal pressure to allow Lee to make a private trip to his old university, Cornell, relations with Beijing went into freefall, hitting a nadir when the US deployed the seventh fleet in the Taiwan Strait to stop China from firing ballistic missiles at Taiwan.

When, after he left office in 2000, Lee was granted a visa to visit his granddaugh­ter’s school in Malvern, China lambasted the British government for breaking the boundaries of what China deemed acceptable.

Lee Teng-hui was born on January 15 1923 in Sanchih, a village on the outskirts of Taipei, when the island was under Japanese rule; he never set foot on the mainland. He became a beneficiar­y of efforts of the Japanese empire to co-opt local elites in its colonies; in his high school class, he was one of only four Taiwanese students.

He sat out the Second World War at Kyoto Imperial University in Japan, returning to study at the National Taiwan University in 1945, during the period of reunificat­ion with mainland China which ended in 1949 when Chiang Kai-shek led his nationalis­t supporters to freedom from China’s communists.

In 1952 he completed a Master’s degree at

Iowa State University, and returned to the

US in the 1960s to do a PHD thesis at Cornell on agricultur­al economics. In the meantime, he had worked in the Us-taiwan Joint Commission on Rural Reconstruc­tion.

Lee joined the ruling Kuomintang (KMT) in 1971 and was made a cabinet minister responsibl­e for agricultur­e. In 1984 President Chiang Ching-kuo appointed him his vicepresid­ent.

Lee was widely credited with the agricultur­al reforms which yielded surpluses that created the basis for the spectacula­r industrial growth of the 1980s.

In his final years, Chiang lifted martial law and legalised opposition parties, but the KMT still ran Taiwan as, in effect, a one-party state. When Chiang died in 1988, Lee was sworn in as his constituti­onal successor.

In the years that followed Lee outmanoeuv­red the more conservati­ve elements in the KMT and pressed on with democratis­ation, reducing the concentrat­ion of government authority in the hands of mainland Chinese.

Until the 1990s the president had been chosen by deputies of the National Assembly. In 1996, however, Lee was re-elected in the first direct presidenti­al election in Taiwanese history, his popularity boosted by missile tests carried out by Beijing in an attempt to intimidate and discourage the electorate from supporting him.

Lee was succeeded in 2000 by Chen Shui-bian, the Democratic Progressiv­e Party candidate whose election ended KMT rule, but who, like his predecesso­r, continued to frustrate Beijing’s attempts to get Taipei to acknowledg­e the mainland’s sovereignt­y and accept a timetable for unificatio­n.

 ??  ?? China regarded him as a pariah
China regarded him as a pariah

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