Protesters from around the country yesterday converged in Greater Kaohsiung, the first stop of Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait Chairman Chen Yunlin’s (陳雲林) first trip to southern Taiwan, for a second day of protest.
Small groups of rowdy demonstrators streamed into key venues throughout Chen’s visit, including E-DA World, the tourist complex where Chen was staying and had lunch with local Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) politicians and business executives.
Their signs bore messages stating that Chen was not welcome in the southern city, a hotbed of support for the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which opposes the visit.
Photo: Huang Chih-yuan, Taipei Times
Clashes almost erupted at the Taiwan High Speed Rail station in the morning when Chen and his entourage were met by dozens of pro-independence supporters and advocates of unification with China.
Chen continued to keep a smile on his face as protesters from the two sides, blocked off by rings of uniformed police, yelled that “Taiwan and China are separate countries,” and “Peaceful unification will give peace to all things.”
Pro-independence supporters, numbering between 150 and 200, continued to tail Chen as he visited the Port of Kaohsiung for an economic conference, the Fo Guang Shan monastery and an export processing zone in the northern part of Greater Kaohsiung.
“Support Taiwan independence,” the protesters chanted, as some threw eggs and chrysanthemums in the direction of Chen’s motorcade. They said the chrysanthemums, in a reference to the “Jasmine Revolution,” served as a substitute, since it is not the season for jasmine.
None of the projectiles hit the passing vehicles, as the demonstrators were kept at a distance by a large police presence, who formed a human barrier backed by barricades and barbed wire.
Police were forced to intervene when several local DPP politicians broke through barriers at one point during the morning visit to the Port of Kaohsiung.
The municipal councilors staged a sit-in after failing to break past the second of four more barbed-wire barricades separating them and a building where Chen addressed a closed-door economic conference, despite pushing and shoving with police.
Busloads of protesters, most of them elderly, arrived from Taipei, Greater Taichung and other cities, led by pro-independence groups and local DPP politicians, keeping a pledge to tail Chen “like his shadow” during his three days in the south.
“It’s a fact — Taiwan and China are two separate countries. Each side of the Taiwan Strait is an independent country,” said Huang Yung-tien (黃永田), a retired pilot from Greater Tainan. “Why must Chen Yunlin come here acting otherwise?”
A few joined the demonstration out of curiosity, drawn by the emotional speeches given by protest leaders.
Yang Fung-kuang (楊豐光), a 30 year-old who said he was in the city for the Lantern Festival, criticized President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) cross-strait policies, contending they were skewed too much in favor of Chinese interests.
“The [lavish] treatment given to Chen Yunlin shows exactly what is wrong with these policies,” Yang said.
A transportation worker surnamed Lu (盧) told the Agence France Presse: “It’s good that Chinese companies come to Kaohsiung to invest, but I worry that China is using economic means to back its real intention of unification.”
Falun Gong supporters also waved banners. About 20 silently prayed on the road leading up to Chen’s hotel, calling on China to respect freedom of religion.
The DPP itself has stopped short of endorsing the protests — despite praising them for showing Chen what they say is another side of Taiwan. The party over the past week called on local authorities to respect the demonstrations, calling the protests a basic right.
A prominent force during the protests was former president Chen Shui-bian’s (陳水扁) son, Greater Kaohsiung Councilor Chen Chih-chung (陳致中), who whipped the crowd into a frenzy in front of the main gates of E-DA World, less than 50m from where Chen Yunlin was staying.
“Taiwan is a democratic country — we don’t want China,” Chen Chih-chung said. “Together we will make ourselves heard to Chen Yunlin that Taiwan and China are two different countries.”
The protests wrapped up at about 6pm after Chen Yunlin did not publicize the rest of his schedule for the night. Nonetheless, organizers said busloads of protesters would continue to follow him as he heads to Chiayi County today and then Yunlin County tomorrow.
In Taipei, Su Jun-pin (蘇俊賓), director of the KMT’s Culture and Communication Committee, said that while the pan-green supporters’ freedom to express opinions should be respected, they should also remain calm so that “Taiwan’s image does not suffer.”
Referring to the DPP’s new cross-strait discourse unveiled on Wednesday, Su said the protests staged by pan-green supporters were ironic in the face of DPP Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen’s (蔡英文) remarks that Taiwan and China must maintain peace by tolerating differences and seeking common ground.
“The protest is tantamount to proclaiming to Taiwanese that the DPP’s new cross-strait policies are simply the same thing in a new wrapper,” Su said.
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY LIN SHU-HUI AND AFP
A Ministry of Foreign Affairs official yesterday said that a delegation that visited China for an APEC meeting did not receive any kind of treatment that downgraded Taiwan’s sovereignty. Department of International Organizations Director-General Jonathan Sun (孫儉元) said that he and a group of ministry officials visited Shenzhen, China, to attend the APEC Informal Senior Officials’ Meeting last month. The trip went “smoothly and safely” for all Taiwanese delegates, as the Chinese side arranged the trip in accordance with long-standing practices, Sun said at the ministry’s weekly briefing. The Taiwanese group did not encounter any political suppression, he said. Sun made the remarks when
The Taiwanese passport ranked 33rd in a global listing of passports by convenience this month, rising three places from last month’s ranking, but matching its position in January last year. The Henley Passport Index, an international ranking of passports by the number of designations its holder can travel to without a visa, showed that the Taiwan passport enables holders to travel to 139 countries and territories without a visa. Singapore’s passport was ranked the most powerful with visa-free access to 192 destinations out of 227, according to the index published on Tuesday by UK-based migration investment consultancy firm Henley and Partners. Japan’s and
BROAD AGREEMENT: The two are nearing a trade deal to reduce Taiwan’s tariff to 15% and a commitment for TSMC to build five more fabs, a ‘New York Times’ report said Taiwan and the US have reached a broad consensus on a trade deal, the Executive Yuan’s Office of Trade Negotiations said yesterday, after a report said that Washington is set to reduce Taiwan’s tariff rate to 15 percent. The New York Times on Monday reported that the two nations are nearing a trade deal to reduce Taiwan’s tariff rate to 15 percent and commit Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) to building at least five more facilities in the US. “The agreement, which has been under negotiation for months, is being legally scrubbed and could be announced this month,” the paper said,
MIXED SOURCING: While Taiwan is expanding domestic production, it also sources munitions overseas, as some, like M855 rounds, are cheaper than locally made ones Taiwan and the US plan to jointly produce 155mm artillery shells, as the munition is in high demand due to the Ukraine-Russia war and should be useful in Taiwan’s self-defense, Armaments Bureau Director-General Lieutenant General Lin Wen-hsiang (林文祥) told lawmakers in Taipei yesterday. Lin was responding to questions about Taiwan’s partnership with allies in producing munitions at a meeting of the legislature’s Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee. Given the intense demand for 155mm artillery shells in Ukraine’s defense against the Russian invasion, and in light of Taiwan’s own defensive needs, Taipei and Washington plan to jointly produce 155mm shells, said Lin,