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Pro-China protests in Taiwan days before Tsai takes office
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) May 18, 2016


China holds landing drills ahead of Taiwan swearing-in
Beijing (AFP) May 18, 2016 - China's military has staged at least three landing exercises in the country's southeast this month, state-run media reported Wednesday ahead of the inauguration of Taiwan's Beijing-sceptic president-elect Tsai Ing-wen.

The operations appear to be Beijing's latest warnings to Tsai, chairwoman of the traditionally pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party, who will be sworn in on Friday and whose political message revolves around the importance of Taiwanese identity.

China and Taiwan split in 1949 after the Kuomintang nationalist forces lost a civil war to the Communists. But Beijing has always seen the island as a renegade province awaiting reunification, by force if necessary.

The largest and most recent of the drills was carried out by a regiment under the 31st Group Army, based in Fujian province opposite Taiwan, reported China Daily, the military's official mouthpiece.

Footage posted on the website of state broadcaster CCTV late Tuesday showed squadrons of attack helicopters bombarded ground targets with missiles and rockets, and landing craft charging towards a beach.

Troops fired grappling hooks to climb up cliffs, heavily camouflaged soldiers used sniper rifles, and tanks rolled through fields.

The live-fire exercises were intended to "demonstrate and test the joint landing operation capability of a basic combat unit", the Daily said, citing Lieutenant Colonel Chen Xiaoming, commander of the regiment.

The report, headlined "iron fist strikes on targets like splitting bamboo", said the drill involved several different PLA service arms and featured information warfare.

The China Daily cited an unnamed Chinese military expert as saying: "The rapid development and modernisation of the PLA now allow us to fulfil a landing operation using only a couple of hours and with few casualties," referring the the People's Liberation Army.

At least two other landing exercises have been mounted this month, one in the southern province of Guangdong and another by the navy's South Sea Fleet using Zubr-class hovercraft, the report added.

Beijing has been sending assertive messages across the Taiwan Strait since Tsai was elected in January.

It has warned against any attempt to formally declare independence and the Taiwan Affairs Office recently said responsibility for any cross-strait crisis "must be shouldered by those who change the status quo", a thinly veiled threat to Tsai not to rock the boat.

China's defence ministry denied Wednesday that the military exercises were aimed at any particular entity, adding they should not be over-interpreted.

"It is routine arrangement to execute military drills in the southeast of China according to annual training plan, and these drills are not aimed at any specific target," it said on its website.

Hundreds of pro-China protesters led by gang leader turned politician "White Wolf" rallied in Taiwan's capital Wednesday, calling on new president Tsai Ing-wen to preserve friendly ties with Beijing, days before she takes office.

China-sceptic Tsai is facing questions over how she will handle cross-strait relations which are already growing rapidly frosty as she prepares to take the helm after an eight-year rapprochement under her Beijing-friendly predecessor Ma Ying-jeou.

Although a fully fledged democracy, self-ruling Taiwan has never formally declared independence and China still sees it as part of its territory.

Tsai's Democratic Progressive Party is traditionally pro-independence and was voted in by a landslide after voters turned their backs on Ma's Beijing-centred approach for fear the island's sovereignty was being eroded.

Led by infamous activist "White Wolf" Chang An-lo -- who heads a small pro-unification party and regularly organises rallies in support of Beijing -- protesters waved banners and Chinese flags outside DPP headquarters.

"We respect Taiwan's democratic freedom, but we can't accept a lack of unity, lack of peace," said Lu Yueh-hsiang of the pro-Beijing China Production Party.

Outgoing president Ma accepted a tacit agreement -- known as the "1992 consensus" -- between his Kuomintang party and Beijing which acknowledges there is only "one China".

That paved the way for a slew of trade deals and a tourist boom as mainland visitors flocked to the island.

Tsai and the DPP have never recognised the agreement and are under pressure from Beijing to do so, with fears China will squeeze Taiwan economically if no compromise can be reached.

"If you accept the '92 consensus, everything can be open for discussion," Chang told AFP.

"Only the '92 consensus can give Taiwan's economy a way forward."

Chang was imprisoned for 10 years in the United States for drug trafficking and then lived in exile for 17 years in China before returning to Taiwan in 2013.

He and his followers have often clashed with China-sceptic protesters, including at the 2014 occupation of parliament by students opposing a controversial trade pact with China.

But Wednesday's rally was calm, as around 300 supporters waved placards and listened to speeches and dance performances on a makeshift stage.

Cross-strait relations have already cooled since Tsai's election victory in January, despite her pledge to maintain the "status quo" with Beijing.

Her inauguration speech when she takes office on Friday will be closely watched by China for how she characterises cross-strait relations.


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Previous Report
TAIWAN NEWS
China threats, popular hopes pour pressure on Taiwan's Tsai
Taipei (AFP) May 17, 2016
When Tsai Ing-wen takes office as Taiwan's president Friday she steps onto a tightrope between voter dreams of national pride and a Beijing that wants the island on a short leash. Tsai's election victory reflected public desire for a president who would put self-ruling Taiwan first, not "sell out" to China, which still sees the island as part of its territory. Her political message revol ... read more


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