The Guardian (USA)

Beijing’s rhetoric in spotlight as Taiwan condemns California shooting

- Sum Lok-kei in Hong Kong

Taiwan’s president has condemned the deadly shooting at a Taiwanese church in California by a man reportedly driven by hatred of the self-governing island, where debate about cross-strait tensions has intensifie­d along with Beijing’s reunificat­ion rhetoric.

Tsai Ing-wen’s office issued a statement saying she condemned “any form of violence” and extended her condolence­s to those killed and injured, and that she had asked the island’s chief representa­tive in the US to fly to California to provide assistance.

David Chou, 68, was arrested on Sunday at Laguna Woods, Orange County, after he allegedly opened fire on a group of people at Geneva Presbyteri­an church, killing one and injuring five others.

Police described the shooting as a “politicall­y motivated hate incident”, saying the suspect could have been motivated by his discontent with crossstrai­t tensions in recent years.

Don Barnes, the Orange county sheriff, said evidence recovered from Chou’s vehicle demonstrat­ed his “hatred for the Taiwanese people”, which could have developed while Chou was living in Taiwan as a young man, where he was “not well-received”.

The notes also suggested Chou believed Taiwan should not be independen­t from China. Online pictures placed Chou at a meeting of a Las Vegas group that supports the “peaceful unificatio­n” of Taiwan and mainland China. The group had sought to distance itself from Chou, Chinese-language media reported.

According to the Alliance for China’s Peaceful Reunificat­ion, there are more than 30 such groups operating across the US. These groups, which are loosely affiliated with a central body in Beijing, can also be found among Chinese communitie­s in Britain, publishing writings against Taiwan independen­ce.

Chou, a US citizen, apparently had grievances with the Taiwanese community in the US, police said. Although police told the Guardian he was born in mainland China, Taiwan’s Central News Agency, citing the head of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Los Angeles, Taiwan’s de facto consulate in the city, reported that he was born in Taiwan in 1953.

While local authoritie­s did not make clear when Chou had moved to the US, it appears that he graduated from the Taichung First Senior High school in Taiwan in 1971 and was involved in an alumni associatio­n in the US, according to the school alumni associatio­n’s website accessed by the Guardian. Chou’s name has now been removed.

According to a 2012 news article, Chou had moved to Las Vegas in 2009 to become a landlord. Local authoritie­s said he lived alone and the rest of his family was in Taiwan, adding Chou had worked as a security guard in the Las Vegas area.

News of the shooting was widely circulated in Taiwan on Tuesday, with local media highlighti­ng Chou’s ties with the pro-unificatio­n group. Prodemocra­cy politician­s blamed Beijing’s rhetoric around reunificat­ion for “radicalisi­ng” Chou into committing the violent act.

“These extremist groups or individual­s could infiltrate and damage Taiwanese communitie­s under the influence of others,” legislator Freddy Lim wrote.

The Kuomintang, which is more pro-China than the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e party, issued a statement condemning the violence, but did not touch on Chou’s political stance.

Dr Wen Liu, assistant research professor at Academia Sinica, a Taiwanese government research facility, blamed the incident on Beijing’s rhetoric in recent years.

“Beijing’s pro-unificatio­n campaign has been sending out dehumanisi­ng languages such as ‘annihilati­ng the people and saving the island’ and dismissing the Taiwanese independen­ce movement as a violent separatist crime,” Liu said.

China claims the self-ruled democratic Taiwan as its own territory and has since Tsai’s election in 2016 blamed her for “pro-independen­ce moves”. In recent years, Beijing’s reunificat­ion rhetoric had become increasing­ly militant, as Taiwan sought to align itself with western powers and rejoin the United Nations system.

Meanwhile, discourse over the shooting on Chinese social media platform Weibo mostly centred on Chou’s nationalit­y, as users argued whether he was Chinese, Taiwanese or American.

“He’s been naturalise­d, if anything this is an American discontent with Taiwan authoritie­s, what has this got to do with mainland [China]?” one user wrote.

Despite active public discourse, both Taiwan and Beijing authoritie­s have not played up the incident on Tuesday.

Wang Wenbin, a spokespers­on for China’s ministry of foreign affairs, said he had “noticed” relevant reports on the shooting and the suspect’s Taiwanese origin. He added: “We hope the US government can take action against its increasing­ly severe gun violence problem.”

 ?? Photograph: Walid Berrazeg/Sopa Images/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Tsai Ing-wen, the president of Taiwan.
Photograph: Walid Berrazeg/Sopa Images/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck Tsai Ing-wen, the president of Taiwan.
 ?? Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty ?? A woman places flowers at a makeshift memorial outside the Taiwanese Presbyteri­an church in Laguna Woods, California, on Monday.
Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty A woman places flowers at a makeshift memorial outside the Taiwanese Presbyteri­an church in Laguna Woods, California, on Monday.

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