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TAIWAN NEWS
Trump election loss robs Taiwan of a powerful, belligerent friend
By Amber WANG
Taipei (AFP) Nov 12, 2020

Trolls get creative after WHO censors Taiwan
Taipei (AFP) Nov 12, 2020 - Alleged censorship of Taiwan on the World Health Organization's Facebook page inspired some creative trolling Thursday, with special characters and foreign scripts used to bypass filters that also censored Winnie the Pooh, a character used to poke fun at Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The deluge came after Taiwan politicians and social media users shared screenshots showing messages containing "Taiwan" or "Taiwan can help" failing to upload underneath a banner advertising a WHO livestreamed event on the coronavirus.

Taiwan has previously accused the global health body of prioritising politics over health, saying Chinese "obstruction" had prevented it from attending a key meeting focused on the coronavirus.

The self-ruled island of 23 million has seen remarkable success in combating the pandemic, with only seven deaths and fewer than 600 confirmed cases.

But it has been frozen out of the WHO by Beijing, which regards Taiwan as its own territory and has vowed to take it by force if necessary.

Social media users in Taiwan used extra characters to get around the block, and to proclaim that "Taiw@n can help" the global health body in combating the virus.

In Hong Kong -- also increasingly in the shadow of authoritarian Beijing -- others posted "Taiwan" in the Vietnamese script that is similar to the Roman alphabet.

Others complained they were unable to share the words "Winnie the Pooh" -- A.A. Milne's self-described "bear of very little brain", who has been used in the past to make fun of China's President Xi Jinping on social media.

Images of the bear, however, slipped through the firewall.

"Acting like authoritarian governments, @WHO is now actively making efforts to silence dissent," tweeted lawmaker Wang Ting-yu of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party.

Foreign minister Joseph Wu said Taiwan had lodged a protest with the WHO to express "strong dissatisfaction and regret".

"It censors (posts) to such an extent... WHO is corrupt and tries to silence netizens," a Taiwanese social media user said.

Between 2009 and 2016, Beijing allowed Taiwan to attend the WHO's annual top meeting as an observer under the name "Chinese Taipei".

But it has been blocked from participating since the 2016 election of President Tsai Ing-wen, who has refused to acknowledge Beijing's stance that Taiwan is part of "One China".

Facebook said Thursday it "did not take any action against a livestream on the World Health Organization's Facebook Page earlier today (including restricting keywords or disabling comments)".

In a statement sent to AFP on Thursday, the WHO said its social media team had applied filters to its Facebook page "to avoid being spammed through cyberattacks."

It had "restored the ability of users to post" the word "Taiwan", it added.

Donald Trump's departure from the White House will leave many US allies breathing easier, but his fiery anti-China rhetoric will be missed by many in Taiwan.

Over the last four years, Trump's unpredictability and often confrontational attitude towards China over trade, the coronavirus and Hong Kong have earned him fans in self-ruled Taiwan, which has spent decades under threat of invasion from its authoritarian neighbour.

That danger has ramped up since the 2016 election of Tsai Ing-wen, who views Taiwan as a sovereign nation, not part of "one China".

Her stance infuriates Beijing, which is now buzzing the island with an unprecedented number of fighter jets and surveillance aircraft.

A Joe Biden presidency promises a return to the kind of liberal internationalism that has been the mark of US foreign policy for decades -- which some in Taiwan worry will mean going soft on China.

"I am disappointed that finally there was a president of a big country who strongly supports Taiwan, like Trump, but he lost the election," said Shanna Lee, a 24-year-old office worker in Taipei.

"No other world leader dares to scold China and speak up for Taiwan as Trump does."

Relations between Washington and Taipei warmed dramatically under the Republican, beginning soon after the votes were counted.

As president-elect in 2016 he received a call from Tsai to congratulate him on his win.

The call -- of the kind routinely carried out by heads of government -- infuriated Beijing, which rails at anything that appears to confer legitimacy on Taiwan as a sovereign state.

Over the next few years, Trump approved $18 billion of military sales to the island, including Harpoon anti-ship missiles and MQ-9 Reaper drones.

And in August, he dispatched the highest ranking US official to visit Taiwan since Washington recognised the communist government of China in 1979.

Ahead of the US election, a YouGov poll of 12 Asian countries and territories, found that only in Taiwan did a majority of respondents say they wanted Trump to win.

The sense in Taipei has been that Trump has raised the island's profile at a time when Beijing continues to pick off its few remaining diplomatic allies, and to block Taiwan from bodies like the World Health Organization.

- 'Pandora's Box' -

On social issues like gay rights, the progressive Tsai has much in common with the Democratic Party, and she was swift to congratulate Biden on Twitter.

But while the president elect said on the campaign trail he would expand ties with Taiwan, analysts say the international round of fence-mending that will likely define the early days of his presidency may see Washington dial back on China.

The odds of another congratulatory phone call between Tsai and Biden "are relatively low," said Sung Wen-ti, a lecturer in Taiwan studies at the Australian National University.

The biggest concern for Taipei is that a Biden administration will distance itself from Taiwan to "secure Chinese cooperation on things like climate change and nuclear proliferation," Michael Mazza, visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, told AFP.

But others say there has been something of a bipartisan realignment when it comes to Taiwan and China, and that the days of Washington treading softly around Beijing may be over.

"Trump has already opened the Pandora's box," said Su Tzu-yun, analyst at the Institute for National Defense and Security Research in Taipei.

"The US has defined China as a major challenge in Asia and urged allies to work together to contain China... Biden has even called Chinese President Xi Jinping a thug.

"The US policy of containing China will not change."


Related Links
Taiwan News at SinoDaily.com


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TAIWAN NEWS
Trolls get creative after WHO censors Taiwan
Taipei (AFP) Nov 12, 2020
Alleged censorship of Taiwan on the World Health Organization's Facebook page inspired some creative trolling Thursday, with special characters and foreign scripts used to bypass filters that also censored Winnie the Pooh, a character used to poke fun at Chinese President Xi Jinping. The deluge came after Taiwan politicians and social media users shared screenshots showing messages containing "Taiwan" or "Taiwan can help" failing to upload underneath a banner advertising a WHO livestreamed event on ... read more

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