Taiwan says 'reunification law' would put too much pressure on China
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[March 24, 2022]
TAIPEI (Reuters) - A senior
Taiwanese official said on Thursday he did not see China adopting a
"reunification law" as it would put too much pressure on Beijing to set
a timetable for bringing the island under its control, which could
severely raise tensions.
China, which views democratically run Taiwan as its own territory, has
not officially proposed such legislation, which would be a follow-up to
a 2005 law giving Beijing the legal basis for military action if it
judges Taiwan to have seceded or to be about to.
But it has been discussed in state media, and last week a spokesperson
for China's Taiwan Affairs Office, asked about a suggestion from a
political adviser for such a law, said they "carefully listen to and
study opinions and suggestions".
Taiwan rejects China's sovereignty claims and says only its people can
decide the island's future.
Taiwan's National Security Bureau Director-General Chen Ming-tong,
taking questions from lawmakers in parliament, said a Chinese proposal
for such legislation had generated a lot of discussion previously.
"It's equivalent to setting a timetable. In the past, during the Deng
Xiaoping era, they tried to set a timetable, but in the end thought it
best not to, as it would put pressure on them," Chen said, referring to
the Chinese leader who died in 1997.
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Chess pieces are seen in front of displayed China and Taiwan's flags
in this illustration taken January 25, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Chinese President Xi Jinping told a
Taiwanese envoy in 2013 that a political solution to their standoff
on sovereignty could not be postponed forever, though he has never
set a timetable.
China has ramped up its military pressure against Taiwan over the
last two years or so, and the Taiwan Strait that separates the two
remains a potentially dangerous military flashpoint.
Chen, whose last job was head of Taiwan's China-policy- making
Mainland Affairs Council, said he did not think China was gearing up
for an attack this year, as Xi was getting ready for a key Communist
Party congress at the end of the year to confirm him for a third
term in office.
"He needs to maintain stability," Chen said.
(Reporting by Roger Tung and Ben Blanchard)
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