Taiwan premier says Hong Kong's freedom and democracy 'have vanished' by AFP Staff Writers Taipei (AFP) July 1, 2022 Freedom and democracy have disappeared in Hong Kong, Taiwan's premier said Friday, as Chinese leader Xi Jinping visited the business hub to celebrate the 25th anniversary of its handover from Britain. Xi used the rare trip to hail China's rule over the city and insist it is flourishing after a years-long political crackdown that has silenced dissent. "One only has to see the pain that Hong Kongers are going through to know whether Hong Kong is doing better or worse," Premier Su Tseng-chang told reporters in Taipei. "It's only been 25 years, and in the past, the promise was 50 years of no change," he said, referencing Beijing's promise that Hong Kong could maintain key freedoms until 2047. "The 'dancing will go on and horses will still run' has disappeared, and even freedom and democracy have vanished," he added, using a quote by former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping promising Hong Kongers that life would not change after the handover. The Chinese Communist Party has never ruled Taiwan but considers the island part of its territory and has vowed to one day seize it, by force if needed. It has has offered Taiwan a One Country, Two Systems governance model similar to Hong Kong that would supposedly allow it to keep some freedoms and autonomy. The offer has been widely rejected across the Taiwanese political spectrum and the suppression of Hong Kong's freedoms by Beijing has further reinforced that sentiment. Su said Taiwan must hold fast to its own sovereignty, freedom and democracy. "China's so-called One Country, Two Systems simply has not stood up to the test," he said.
Taiwan general charged in China spying case Taipei (AFP) June 24, 2022 A retired Taiwanese general and another senior officer were indicted on Friday for their involvement in developing a spying network for China, prosecutors said. Taipei and Beijing have spied on each other since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949, when the losing Nationalist side fled to the island. The major general, identified by his family name Chien, and a retired lieutenant colonel surnamed Wei were charged with violating the national security law, said the Taipei District Prosecutors ... read more
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