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Taiwan's Tsai confirms she will seek reelection in 2020
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) Feb 19, 2019

Taiwan protests Spain deportations of fraudsters to China
Taipei (AFP) Feb 18, 2019 - Taiwan hit out at Spain on Monday after two Taiwanese fraud suspects were deported to China over objections from the government in Taipei and human rights groups.

Returning Taiwanese criminals to China has become a major source of friction between Beijing and Taiwan -- and illustrates the island's isolated diplomatic status.

Taiwan's Criminal Investigation Bureau says more than 400 Taiwanese fraud suspects arrested abroad have been deported to China since April 2016.

Most are caught operating lucrative boiler room style phone scams whose victims tend to be mainland Chinese.

Beijing views self-ruling Taiwan as a breakaway part of its territory.

Since the election of Taiwan's China-sceptic President Tsai Ing-wen in 2016, it has begun insisting scammers should be deported to the mainland, where they often serve lengthy sentences.

Analysts say the policy is designed to pressure Taipei which has condemned the deportations as "abductions".

But Taiwan -- which is only diplomatically recognised by 17 countries -- has often found itself powerless to persuade countries over the clout of China.

On Monday Taiwan's foreign ministry said it had "expressed grave concerns and strong regret" after Spain deported a pair of Taiwanese suspects to the mainland on Friday.

The move, it said, "disregards China's human rights conditions".

The two suspects were part of 219 Taiwanese arrested in Spain in 2016 on fraud charges.

Madrid had previously vowed to return the Taiwanese passport holders to the Chinese mainland.

Spanish lawyers and local rights groups fought in the courts to halt the deportations.

But in May 2018 two suspects were deported, a move which the UN's human rights watchdog said contravened Madrid's international commitments not to return people to places where they face torture, forced labour or the death penalty.

It is unclear how many of the group of 219 have since been deported to mainland China.

In recent years more than 2,000 Taiwanese fraud suspects have been arrested in more than a dozen countries.

Beijing has justified its demands that the suspects be deported to the mainland rather than Taiwan because the majority of the phone fraud victims are mainland Chinese.

Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen has confirmed she will seek reelection next year despite falling ratings and an increasingly strained relationship with China.

Tsai, who was elected in 2016 as the island's first female leader, told CNN she wanted to "complete" her vision for Taiwan in an interview on board her presidential jet, released Tuesday.

"It's natural that any sitting president wants to do more for the country and wants to finish things on his or her agenda. And it's quite natural for a president seeking another four years to complete his agenda or her agenda," she said.

Tsai, 62, won a landslide victory two years ago to defeat the ruling Beijing-friendly Kuomintang (KMT) party which oversaw an unprecedented thaw in cross-strait ties but began to unnerve many voters with its perceived cosiness to the mainland.

The result rattled Beijing because Tsai -- who hails from the independence-leaning Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) -- refuses to acknowledge that the self-ruled island is part of "one China".

She reached out to the mainland's leadership after her election to seek talks but was rebuffed. Instead, Beijing cut communication with her administration, stepped up military drills and poached several of Taiwan's dwindling diplomatic allies.

Her popularity at home has waned considerably, primarily a backlash to domestic policies such as much needed public-sector pension reforms and a push for gay marriage rights that incensed and galvanised conservatives.

Her ratings fell as low as 15 percent after she stepped down as head of the DPP following a series of major defeats in November local elections.

Tsai said she is "confident" about her reelection prospects, despite calls from some senior DPP members asking her not to stand again in early 2020.

"This is something I have prepared for," she told CNN.

"It's again another challenge. Being president, you're not short of challenges. At good times you have challenges of one sort, and in bad times you have challenges of another sort."

Tsai blamed the election setback on what she called a "difficult reform agenda" pushed by her government, rather than the frosty cross-strait relations.

"You get attacks, you get criticism, the people don't feel the result of the reform so much when you've just started," she said.

The embattled leader's popularity has rebounded somewhat after a bellicose New Year's speech by Chinese leader Xi Jinping, describing Taiwan's unification with the mainland as "inevitable".

Tsai delivered her own riposte, saying Taiwan would never relinquish its hard won democratic freedoms, a response that led to a boost in her ratings.

Her main challengers will be from the opposition KMT, with several of its heavyweights already indicating their interest in running, including former New Taipei City mayor Eric Chu, who lost to Tsai in 2016.


Related Links
Taiwan News at SinoDaily.com


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TAIWAN NEWS
Dissidents trapped inside Taiwan airport allowed in after 125 days
Taipei (AFP) Jan 31, 2019
Two Chinese activists who spent more than four months trapped in limbo at a Taiwanese airport have been temporarily allowed to stay on the island, officials said Thursday. Liu Xinglian, 64, and Yan Kefen, 44, spent 125 days marooned in the transit area of Taoyuan airport after they arrived from Bangkok in September last year. The pair ran from China because of their political activism and were granted refugee status by the UN in Thailand. But they fled once more after receiving repeated vi ... read more

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