The Columbus Dispatch

Taiwan rejects China’s ‘path’

- Huizhong Wu

TAIPEI, Taiwan – Taiwan’s president on Sunday vowed to defend the island from China’s rising pressure for reunification, after a week of unpreceden­ted tensions with Beijing.

Speaking at the island’s National Day celebratio­ns, a rare show of Taiwanese defense capabiliti­es in the annual parade underlined Tsai Ing-wen’s promise to resist Chinese military threats.

“We will do our utmost to prevent the status quo from being unilateral­ly altered,” Tsai said.

“We will continue to bolster our national defense and demonstrat­e our determinat­ion to defend ourselves in order to ensure that nobody can force Taiwan to take the path China has laid out for us,” the Taiwanese leader added.china claims Taiwan as part of its national territory although the island has been self-ruled since it split from the communist-ruled mainland in 1949 after a long civil war.

Tsai emphasized the island’s vibrant democracy in contrast with Beijing’s deeply authoritar­ian, singlepart­y Communist state.

“The path that China has laid out offers neither a free and democratic way of life for Taiwan, nor sovereignt­y for our 23 million people,” Tsai said.

A choir of singers from Taiwan’s various indigenous tribes opened the ceremony in front of the Presidenti­al Office Building in the center of the capital, Taipei.

Surveys show Taiwanese overwhelmi­ngly favor their current de-facto independen­t state and strongly rejects unification with China, which has vowed to bring the island under its

control, by military force if necessary.

Tsai rarely singles out China in her public speeches, but in this speech acknowledg­ed the increasing tensions that Taiwan faces as Chinese military harassment intensified in the past year. Since September of last year, China has flown fighter jets more than 800 times towards Taiwan.

The island has strengthen­ed its unofficial ties with countries like Japan, Australia and the U.S. in the face of these perceived threats.

“But the more we achieve, the greater the pressure we face from China,” Tsai said in her speech.

Tsai said Taiwan wanted to contribute to peaceful regional developmen­t, even as the situation becomes “more tense and complex” in the Indo-pacific.

On Saturday, China’s leader Xi Jinping said that reunification with Taiwan “must be realized,” while claiming “peaceful” reunification was possible.

“No one should underestim­ate the Chinese people’s strong determinat­ion, will and capability to safeguard national sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity,” Xi declared.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office issued a statement Sunday night in response to

Tsai’s speech, saying that Tsai’s party, the Democratic Progressiv­e Party, is “the source of turbulence and tension in cross-strait relations, and the biggest threat to peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait.”

The parade Sunday in Taipei also featured Taiwan’s Olympic athletes who won medals at the Tokyo summer games, as well as public health officials, including those who staff a daily news conference about the pandemic, wearing their distinctiv­e neon yellow-edged vests.

Tsai also called on other legislativ­e parties to put aside politics in order to push for the reform of the island’s constituti­on.

 ?? YING-YING/AP CHIANG ?? Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen, right, and Yu Shyi-kun, speaker of the Legislativ­e Yuan, cheer with the audience during National Day celebratio­ns Sunday in Taipei.
YING-YING/AP CHIANG Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen, right, and Yu Shyi-kun, speaker of the Legislativ­e Yuan, cheer with the audience during National Day celebratio­ns Sunday in Taipei.

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