Former UK Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith yesterday urged democracies to stand with Taiwan against growing threats from China.
Speaking at a Taipei event of a cross-party international lawmaker alliance he cochairs, Duncan Smith said that as they were gathering in Taiwan, "only a short distance away, the authoritarian regime of the Chinese Communist Party plots and plans the demise of Taiwan, your independence."
Photo: Huang Ching-hsuan, Taipei Times
"Compared with Beijing, Taiwan is a 'vibrant democracy with its own government, its own institutions and people who freely choose their government and their destiny' with 'open, transparent and very hard-forged elections," he said.
However, "too many Western governments in the pursuit of trade now seem prepared to turn a blind eye to the brutal behavior of China," the Conservative Party leader from 2001 to 2003 said, calling it "a modern form of appeasement."
"China has one objective to take back Taiwan and we should have one objective: To stop them doing it whenever," he said.
"When Beijing threatens Taiwan, it threatens far more than the territory of Taiwan. It threatens the principles that free peoples anywhere have the right to choose their own destiny," he said.
"That is why Taiwan matters, not only to Asia, but to the whole world," he said. "Taiwan is on the front line of the global struggle, dictatorship and democracy, and your island is right there on the front line, that is why we must defend it."
Duncan Smith delivered the address yesterday at a gala in Taipei hosted by the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC).
Founded in 2020, the cross-party group brings together more than 240 lawmakers from 27 countries to focus on China-related trade, security and human rights.
Speaking at the same event, Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴) thanked IPAC members for traveling to Taiwan to show "steadfast support" for its people.
"Your presence here sends a powerful message of solidarity among democracies and freedom-loving people around the world," she said.
Hsiao said that in recent years, IPAC has played an important role in countering China's influence and supporting Taiwan's democracy, with its members "consistently speaking out with clarity and determination on the challenges posed by authoritarian regimes."
"Taiwan stands at the front line of democracy. As a vital hub in the global supply chain, we fully understand our responsibility and will continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with our international partners to safeguard the values that we hold dear," Hsiao said.
A magnitude 6.1 earthquake struck off the coast of Yilan County at 8:39pm tonight, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said, with no immediate reports of damage or injuries. The epicenter was 38.7km east-northeast of Yilan County Hall at a focal depth of 98.3km, the CWA’s Seismological Center said. The quake’s maximum intensity, which gauges the actual physical effect of a seismic event, was a level 4 on Taiwan’s 7-tier intensity scale, the center said. That intensity level was recorded in Yilan County’s Nanao Township (南澳), Hsinchu County’s Guansi Township (關西), Nantou County’s Hehuanshan (合歡山) and Hualien County’s Yanliao (鹽寮). An intensity of 3 was
Instead of focusing solely on the threat of a full-scale military invasion, the US and its allies must prepare for a potential Chinese “quarantine” of Taiwan enforced through customs inspections, Stanford University Hoover fellow Eyck Freymann said in a Foreign Affairs article published on Wednesday. China could use various “gray zone” tactics in “reconfiguring the regional and ultimately the global economic order without a war,” said Freymann, who is also a nonresident research fellow at the US Naval War College. China might seize control of Taiwan’s links to the outside world by requiring all flights and ships entering or leaving Taiwan
The next minimum wage hike is expected to exceed NT$30,000, President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday during an award ceremony honoring “model workers,” including migrant workers, at the Presidential Office ahead of Workers’ Day today. Lai said he wished to thank the awardees on behalf of the nation and extend his most sincere respect for their hard work, on which Taiwan’s prosperity has been built. Lai specifically thanked 10 migrant workers selected for the award, saying that although they left their home countries to further their own goals, their efforts have benefited Taiwan as well. The nation’s industrial sector and small businesses lay
Taiwan's first indigenous defense submarine, the SS-711 Hai Kun (海鯤, or Narwhal), departed for its 13th sea trial at 7am today, marking its seventh submerged test, with delivery to the navy scheduled for July. The outing also marked its first sea deployment since President William Lai (賴清德) boarded the submarine for an inspection on March 19, drawing a crowd of military enthusiasts who gathered to show support. The submarine this morning departed port accompanied by CSBC Corp’s Endeavor Manta (奮進魔鬼魚號) uncrewed surface vessel and a navy M109 assault boat. Amid public interest in key milestones such as torpedo-launching operations and overnight submerged trials,