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TAIWAN NEWS
Taiwan politician Lien meets Xi, defying Taipei
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 1, 2015


Taiwan jails Chinese man indicted as Beijing spy
Taipei (AFP) Sept 1, 2015 - A Taiwanese district court Tuesday found a Chinese man guilty of recruiting local military officers to spy for Beijing and sentenced him to four years in jail.

Zhen Xiaojiang, who served in China's army, was charged in January with violating national security law along with six Taiwanese military officials.

"The defendant Zhen followed orders from the Chinese Communist army... arranged frequent, long meetings to introduce active and retired officials to mainland military officials," according to a statement posted on the court's website.

"This not only shakes the morale of the national army, but also threatens the development of (Taiwan's) security," it said.

Zhen appeared in Taipei District Court Tuesday along with retired Taiwanese Major General Hsu Nai-chuan, who was sentenced to three years in jail on the same charges.

The two men were handcuffed and returned to custody after the verdict was read out.

The five other Taiwanese military officials were also found guilty but handed much lighter sentences. They were not present in court.

Zhen's lawyer, who declined to give his name, told AFP after the verdict that they would likely appeal as his sentence was "harsh".

Breach of the national security law typically has a maximum sentence of five years in Taiwan, he added.

Prosecutors previously said Zhen had repeatedly visited Taiwan since 2005 using his Hong Kong residential status under the pretext of doing business or sightseeing.

The verdict didn't mention what classified details were leaked to China through Zhen's arrangements.

Taiwanese media earlier reported China obtained information on Taiwan's arms procurement and an ultra-high-frequency radar installation.

Taiwan and China have spied on each other ever since they split in 1949 at the end of a civil war. Beijing still regards the self-governing island as part of its territory awaiting reunification.

Zhen isn't the first to be indicted as a Chinese spy. A retired vice-admiral was jailed for 14 months for collecting confidential military information for China.

In 2011 an army general who led an intelligence unit was sentenced to life imprisonment for spying in one of Taiwan's worst espionage scandals.

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday met a former chairman of Taiwan's ruling Kuomintang (KMT) party who will attend Beijing's massive military parade this week despite opposition from Taipei.

Taiwan has condemned the visit of former vice president Lien Chan and encouraged its veterans to stay away from the parade celebrating the 70th anniversary of Japan's defeat, as Beijing and Taipei clash over who should take the credit for victory against Japan in 1945.

Forces of the KMT, then the rulers of China, fought all the major set-piece battles against Japan during a bitter eight-year war before allied forces intervened.

But China's Communist Party -- which defeated the KMT in a subsequent civil war and forced them to flee to Taiwan -- depicts itself as playing the leading role in defeating Japan.

Meeting Xi, Lien emphasised the KMT's role in the war effort.

"The Chinese KMT forces... fought a series of decisive and major battles on the front line and dealt the Japanese military a heavy blow," Lien told Xi, according to Shanghai news website guancha.cn.

"The Chinese Communist Party forces led by Mao Zedong effectively pinned down and intercepted the Japanese and the collaborationist militaries on the battlefield behind enemy lines," he added.

Xi, who is head of the Communist Party, said the KMT and the Communists "cooperated and coordinated" in the campaign and "both made significant contributions to the victory of the war against (Japanese aggression)", the official Xinhua news agency reported.

"Chinese people across the Taiwan Strait must keep history in mind, remember national heroes and get united to maintain the victory fruits and jointly advance the peaceful development of our relations," Xinhua quoted him as saying.

The office of Taiwan's president last week said that citizens should refrain from taking part in the parade, after a government spokesman warned against "distorting" history.

The military parade will feature 12,000 soldiers and 500 pieces of hardware rolling through Tiananmen Square with almost 200 aircraft flying overhead, in a display of strength as Beijing takes an increasingly assertive stance regionally.

China's army expansion has worried several of its Asian neighbours, and major Western leaders have shunned the show amid fears that Beijing is seeking to show off its military might.


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