Oct. 1 marks when Mao Zedong proclaimed the People's Republic of
China in 1949, with the defeated Republic of China government
fleeing to Taiwan at the end of that year and where it remains
to this day, neither recognising the other.
China's national day is not officially marked in any way in
democratically-governed Taiwan, which celebrates its national
day, the founding of the Republic of China, on Oct. 10.
But some small groups in Taiwan do mark China's national day,
with either pride at being Chinese or fury at Beijing's threats
against the island, especially after China staged war games near
Taiwan in August.
In a rural part of Tainan in the south, the Taiwan People's
Communist Party gathered about 200 people, mostly elderly, to
sing China's national anthem and raise the country's flag on
what the party referred to in a news release as "a sacred part
of China's territory".
Lin Te-wang, the chairman of the party which has no elected
officials and is very fringe, told Reuters that China was no
threat, despite the recent war games which were condemned by all
of Taiwan's mainstream parties.
"Military exercises are good for Taiwan because they show the
majesty of China's military force internationally," Lin, 67,
said.
At the other end of the spectrum, the pro-independence Taiwan
Statebuilding Party burned a Chinese flag on Saturday on a boat
off Taiwan's south coast in an area of the sea where China
staged its August drills, shouting slogans including "protect
Taiwan to the death".
Party Chairman Chen Yi-chi told Reuters on the boat in the
Taiwan Strait that burning the flag was not provocative.
"How can burning the flag be extreme? If you want to show your
resistance to defending Taiwan now, if burning the flag is
extreme, what will you do when the artillery fire comes?"
The party lost its only member of parliament last year after he
was voted out in a recall election.
China considers Taiwan to be part of the People's Republic, over
the strenuous objections of the government in Taipei, which says
Beijing has no right to claim it or speak for the Taiwanese
people.
(Reporting by Ann Wang; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Kim
Coghill)
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