Chinese
state media launches tirade at Taiwan after historic vote — declares any more
towards independence to be ‘poison’
Tsai Ing-wen and her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) won a
convincing victory in both presidential and parliamentary elections on
Saturday, in what could usher in a new round of instability with China, which
claims self-ruled Taiwan as its own.
Tsai pledged to maintain
peace with its giant neighbour China, while China’s Taiwan Affairs Office
warned it would oppose any move towards independence and that Beijing was determined
to defend the country’s sovereignty.
Reacting to Tsai’s victory,
China’s government-controlled media used noticeably less shrill language than
that levelled at Chen Shui-bian, the DPP’s last president, and noted her
pledges for peace and to maintain the “status quo” with China.
But the official Xinhua news
agency also warned any moves towards independence were like a “poison” that
would cause Taiwan to perish.
“If there is no peace and
stability in the Taiwan Strait, Taiwan’s new authority will find the sufferings
of the people it wishes to resolve on the economy, livelihood and its youth
will be as useless as looking for fish in a tree,” it said.
China called Chen, who led
Taiwan from 2000-2008, a troublemaker and a saboteur of cross-strait ties, even
as he tried to maintain stable relations with Beijing.
The Global Times, an influential tabloid published by the ruling Communist Party’s official
People’s Daily newspaper, said in an editorial that if Tsai’s administration
sought to “cross the red line” like Chen, Taiwan would “meet a dead end”.
“We hope Tsai can lead the
DPP out of the hallucinations of Taiwan independence, and contribute to the
peaceful and common development between Taiwan and the mainland,” it added.
In Taiwan, the
China-friendly China Times called on Tsai to be a “dove for cross strait
peace”.
“Peace across the Taiwan
Strait is the most important external factor for Taiwan’s stable development,”
it said in an editorial.
Tsai won 56 per cent of the
vote to sweep aside rival Eric Chu of the China-friendly Nationalist Party that
had ruled Taiwan under incumbent president Ma Ying-jeou since 2008.
Tsai’s DPP also made huge
gains in the parliamentary polls to gain an absolute majority with 68 seats in
the 113-seat legislature, giving her administration a far stronger
policy-making lever over the next four years, and potentially more leverage
over Beijing on cross-strait deals and affairs.
China’s Foreign Ministry, in
its reaction to her victory, said Taiwan was an internal matter for China,
there is only one China in the world and the island’s election neither changes
this reality nor international acceptance of it.
“There is only one China in
the world, the mainland and Taiwan both belong to one China and China’s
sovereignty and territorial integrity will not brook being broken up,” the
ministry added.
“The results of the Taiwan
region election does not change this basic fact and the consensus of the
international community.”
Tsai has been thrust into
one of Asia’s toughest and most dangerous jobs, with China pointing hundreds of
missiles at the island it claims, decades after the losing Nationalists fled
from Mao Zedong’s Communists to Taiwan in the Chinese civil war in 1949.
The White House said on
Saturday it congratulated Tsai and said the United States maintained a
“profound interest” in peace between Taiwan and China.
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