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TAIWAN NEWS
Taiwan vice president heads for US stopover
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) Aug 13, 2012


Taiwan's vice president left Monday for a stopover in the United States on a trip considered a test of a "diplomatic truce" with China which has previously protested over such visits.

Wu Den-yih was due to stop in New York before flying on to the Dominican Republic, where he will take part in the presidential inauguration of Danilo Medina, the presidential office said in a statement, adding that he would also visit Belize.

"The brief stay in New York is purely a transit," foreign ministry spokesman Steve Shia told AFP, in an apparent bid to keep the trip low profile.

Wu will transit in Los Angeles on his return from his 12-day tour.

Beijing insists Taiwan is part of its territory and opposes any overseas visit by Taiwanese officials. It was not clear if Beijing would lodge a complaint with Washington over Wu's stopover.

China repeatedly protested to Washington over US transit stops made by President Ma Ying-jeou's predecessor Chen Shui-bian, who irked Beijing with his confrontational pro-independence rhetoric.

But relations have improved dramatically since Ma, of the China-friendly Kuomintang, came to power in 2008 on a platform of beefing up trade and tourism links. He was re-elected in January for a second and last four-year term.

Observers see Wu's trip as a test of Ma's policy of maintaining a "diplomatic truce" with China, aiming to end a decades-old rivalry that saw the two former rivals seeking to lure allies away from each other.

Both sides had accused each other of using generous financial packages to ensure the loyalty of governments or persuade them to switch allegiance, especially in Africa, Latin America and the Pacific.

Only 23 nations formally recognise Taipei over Beijing.

Related Links
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Taiwan man says 'forced to show remorse' in China
Taipei (AFP) Aug 13, 2012 - A Taiwanese man who was detained in China for nearly two months on Monday said he had been forced to show remorse in exchange for his safe return to the island.

Chung Ting-pang, a follower of the Falungong -- a spiritual movement banned in China -- was arrested and placed under "house arrest" as he checked in for his return flight from the Chinese mainland on June 18.

The technology manager, 53, returned to Taiwan on Saturday.

China's state-run Xinhua news agency said Chung, who was accused of endangering Chinese national security and public safety, had "confessed and shown remorse", an allegation he flatly rejected.

"The so-called confession and remorse was not done under my free will," Chung told reporters in the company of his wife and daughter during a press conference in Taipei.

Chung said his trip was simply to visit relatives.

However, he admitted that in the three years to 2006 he had made and sent to Falungong members satellite equipment that had been used to broadcast the beliefs outlawed in China.

"As a Falungong member, I had done something in order to let the people in China not misunderstand and hate Falungong... People in the mainland have the right to know the truth," he said.

His release came just after Taiwan and China signed a landmark investment pact, underlining warming ties since 2008, when Ma Ying-jeou of the Kuomintang party came to power on a platform of beefing up trade and tourism links.

Falungong followers and Chung's family had held protests to turn up the heat on the China-friendly government and his family appealed to a US congressman for help in securing Chung's release.

The political opposition have repeatedly accused Ma of showing weak leadership regarding China's human rights record.

Taiwan and China split in 1949 at the end of a civil war.



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TAIWAN NEWS
Taiwan, China sign investment pact as protesters rage
Taipei (AFP) Aug 9, 2012
China and Taiwan signed a landmark investment pact on Thursday as hundreds of protesters voiced their anger over the island's ever closer economic ties with its giant former foe. China's chief negotiator Chen Yunlin and his Taiwanese counterpart Chiang Pin-kung put their names to the long-awaited deal, which will provide a legal umbrella for Taiwan companies in China. "The agreement will ... read more


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