Taiwan president urges China to review policy after election win

China is already angry with Taiwan after Tsai won re-election last weekend


Reuters January 15, 2020
Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen. PHOTO: REUTERS

TAIPEI: Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen urged China on Wednesday to review its policy towards the island, days after she won a landslide re-election victory, in a rebuke that could fuel further tensions with China.

“We hope China can understand the opinion and will expressed by Taiwanese people in this election and review their current policies,” Tsai told reporters in Taipei. She did not elaborate.

Tsai Ing-wen wins landslide in Taiwan election

China considers democratic Taiwan its own territory and has tried military threats and economic inducements to get the island to accept its rule. Taiwan says it is an independent country, called the Republic of China, its official name.

China is already angry with Taiwan after Tsai won re-election by a landslide last weekend in a campaign in which she routinely denounced China’s efforts at intimidation and said Taiwan would not be bullied into submission.

Tsai says Taiwan is an independent country called the Republic of China, its official name, and points out that the People’s Republic of China has never ruled Taiwan.

Taipei Mayor Ko is no supporter of Taiwan’s formal independence. He visited Shanghai last year and has said that the two sides of the Taiwan Strait are part of “one family”.

Ko is widely expected to stand for the presidency in the 2024 elections.

The Shanghai city government recently suspended official contact with Prague after the Czech capital Prague signed a sister city agreement with Taiwan’s capital, Taipei, in the latest round of Chinese-Czech diplomatic tensions.

Czech President Milos Zeman has pushed ties with China. But the capital’s government has taken a much harder line, including Prague Mayor Zdenek Hrib’s refusal to eject a Taiwanese diplomat from a conference at the demand of a Chinese official, and his decision to fly the Tibetan flag at City Hall to highlight human rights issues.

Billions of dollars worth of Chinese investments in the country have also not materialised.

On Monday, Hrib and Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je signed a sister city agreement in Prague along with other cultural and tourism deals.

The government of Shanghai, mainland China’s most cosmopolitan city and its financial hub, said in a statement that Prague’s government had made many missteps on Chinese core issues such as Taiwan.

Shanghai suspends all ties with Prague in spat over Taiwan

They have “wantonly interfered in China’s internal politics and publicly challenged the ‘one China’ principle”, it said. “The Shanghai city government and people strongly rebuke this and express their stern opposition.”

Owing to the disappearance of the right “political preconditions”, Shanghai will immediately suspend all official interactions with Prague, it added.

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