Taiwan's medals revive debate over use of 'Chinese Taipei'
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[August 03, 2021]
By Yimou Lee
TAIPEI (Reuters) -After Taiwan beat China in the badminton men's
doubles final at the Tokyo Olympic Games on Saturday, gold medalist
Wang Chi-Lin made a Facebook comment that cast a spotlight on a
contentious debate on the Chinese-claimed island: "I'm from Taiwan".
Wang's team competes at the Olympics as "Chinese Taipei" at the
insistence of Beijing, which sees Taiwan as part of "one China" and
has never ruled out the use of force to bring the democratic island
under its control.
But with its first gold in badminton plus nine other medals and
counting, Taiwan's best-ever Olympic performance has revived an old
debate on the island over the practice by international
organisations of referring to Taiwan as Chinese, and whether the
island should compete under the name "Taiwan".
The Olympic success has brought jubilation on the island, with
politicians and celebrities joining in to tag their social media
celebrations "Team Taiwan" and "Taiwan is Taiwan".
"No more Chinese Taipei," said social media poster Lin Chia-yin,
reacting to Wang's celebration of his Taiwan identity.
More than a million Facebook users liked Wang's comment.
"Support competing in the Olympics under Taiwan! Let the world see
the name of Taiwan!" Lin said.
Beijing's position is that the island of 23.5 million people has no
right to recognition in any sphere as a separate country. It
regularly presses international groups and companies to refer to
Taiwan as part of China. Only 15 countries - most of them very small
- even recognise Taiwan.
China's Taiwan Affairs Office said in a statement to Reuters that
"Chinese Taipei's" participation in the Games was in line with the
"one China" principle and jointly agreed both by athletes across the
Taiwan Strait and international sporting bodies.
"The principle cannot be challenged," the office said. "It's a dead
end to seek 'independence' in sports events with petty tricks."
Taiwan's Presidential Office declined to comment.
'CONFUSION'
The rivalry between Beijing and Taipei goes back to the end of
China's civil war in 1949.
The name "Chinese Taipei" originated in the late 1970s when, under a
compromise between Taipei's Olympic Committee and the International
Olympic Committee, Taiwan competed under the name Chinese Taipei
without the use of its flag and anthem. Similar rules were set in
other sports competitions.
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Gold medallists Lee Yang of Taiwan and
Wang Chi-Lin of Taiwan pose with their medals. REUTERS/Leonhard
Foeger/File Photo
The dispute over the name resurfaced
last month when Japanese public broadcaster NHK referred to the team
as from Taiwan during the opening ceremony, to the delight of Taiwan
politicians and many members of the public.
"'Chinese Taipei' has caused much confusion and misunderstanding
internationally," Jerry Liu, director of International Affairs at
the opposition New Power Party and a former Taiwan diplomat, told
Reuters.
"Taiwan is Taiwan."
But enthusiasm on the island for a Taiwan identity does not mean
that voters are ready to challenge the geopolitical reality.
In 2018, voters in a referendum rejected a proposal to enter the
Olympics as "Taiwan" rather than "Chinese Taipei". Many feared that
changing the name would prompt China to try to block the island from
the Games altogether.
Lo Chih-Cheng, a lawmaker for Taiwan's ruling Democratic Progressive
Party, described the term Chinese Taipei as an "unacceptable
arrangement that people were forced to accept".
He told Reuters that while Taiwan might not be able to change the
status quo internationally, people should not "take it for granted"
at home and should call team Taiwan by its name.
Activists are gearing up to call for another referendum before the
Paris Olympics in 2024, media has reported.
Johnny Chiang, chairman of Taiwan's main opposition Kuomintang
Party, which favours closer ties with China, said it was not the
right time to push for a change.
"Team Chinese Taipei is our delegation in the Olympics," he said
recently. "Don't distract athletes with ideology and create
turmoil."
(Reporting By Yimou LeeEditing by Tony Munroe, Robert Birsel)
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