China's draft anti-secession law shows the Communist Party's resolve to achieve eventual unification with Taiwan, and codifies the policies developed over the last 25 years, a Chinese expert on Taiwan affairs said yesterday.
The law codifies policies including the "one China" and "peaceful reunification" principles to "express the mainland's resolve in reunification," said Zhang Tongxin (張同新), director of the Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao Research Center at the People's University in Beijing.
Zhang said the use of the phrase "non-peaceful means" in the new law has a wider scope than earlier expressions that said China "reserved the right to use force" against Taiwan.
"These two wordings are the same in nature, but they have a different scope," he said.
Non-peaceful means, he said, could include non-combative "confrontation" or "coercive means."
"For example, a blockade to stop energy [resources] going into Taiwan, in order to achieve a certain goal," he said.
"So it's not simply a difference in wording, but a more comprehensive description [of China's policy on unification]," he said.
The law will also make it a fait accompli that Taiwan will unify with China sooner or later, he said.
"It won't be changed because of changes in the Chinese leadership," Zhang said. "Policies might change when leaders change."
The law is not expected to set any timetable for Taiwan's unification with China, but last year former president Jiang Zemin (江澤民) reportedly set a target date of around 2020.
Zhang refuted claims that the passing of the law will raise tension across the Taiwan Strait, saying that the law aimed to "prevent unexpected situations" caused by pro-independence activities in Taiwan.
"If there is any increased tension, it is because of the Taiwan side," he said, adding that the law was drafted in response to a "series of Taiwan independence activities."
Actor Darren Wang (王大陸) was sentenced to six months in prison, commutable to a fine, by the New Taipei District Court today for contravening the Personal Data Protection Act (個人資料保護法) in a case linked to an alleged draft-dodging scheme. Wang allegedly paid NT$3.6 million (US$114,380) to an illegal group to help him evade mandatory military service through falsified medical documents, prosecutors said. He transferred the funds to Chen Chih-ming (陳志明), the alleged mastermind of a draft-evasion ring, although he lost contact with him as he was already in detention on fraud charges, they said. Chen is accused of helping a
SECURITY: Starlink owner Elon Musk has taken pro-Beijing positions, and allowing pro-China companies to control Taiwan’s critical infrastructure is risky, a legislator said Starlink was reluctant to offer services in Taiwan because of the nation’s extremely high penetration rates in 4G and 5G services, the Ministry of Digital Affairs said yesterday. The ministry made the comments at a meeting of the legislature’s Transportation Committee, which reviewed amendments to Article 36 of the Telecommunications Management Act (電信管理法). Article 36 bans foreigners from holding more than 49 percent of shares in public telecommunications networks, while shares foreigners directly and indirectly hold are also capped at 60 percent of the total, unless specified otherwise by law. The amendments, sponsored by Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Ko
UNREASONABLE SURVEILLANCE: A camera targeted on an road by a neighbor captured a man’s habitual unsignaled turn into home, netting him dozens of tickets The Taichung High Administrative Court has canceled all 45 tickets given to a man for failing to use a turn signal while driving, as it considered long-term surveillance of his privacy more problematic than the traffic violations. The man, surnamed Tseng (曾), lives in Changhua County and was reported 45 times within a month for failing to signal while driving when he turned into the alley where his residence is. The reports were filed by his neighbor, who set up security cameras that constantly monitored not only the alley but also the door and yard of Tseng’s house. The surveillance occurred from July
‘SAME OLD TRICK’: Even if Beijing resumes individual travel to Taiwan, it would only benefit Chinese tourism companies, the Economic Democracy Union convener said China’s 10 new “incentives” are “sugar-coated poison,” an official said yesterday, adding that Taiwanese businesses see them clearly for what they are, but that Beijing would inevitably find some local collaborators to try to drums up support. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, made the remark ahead of a news conference the General Chamber of Commerce is to hold today. The event, titled “Industry Perspectives on China’s Recent Pro-Taiwan Policies,” is expected to include representatives from industry associations — such as those in travel, hotels, food and agriculture — to request the government cooperate with China’s new measures, people familiar with