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Taiwan’s president-elect said today that democracy would be at the heart of future relations with China after they hit bumps recently over sensitive issues like the forced deportation of Taiwanese suspects from Kenya to the mainland.
Tsai Ing-wen, who will take office on 20 May as the island’s first female president, repeated her vow to maintain the “status quo” across the Taiwan Strait that separates the island from the mainland.
“I’ll abide by my promise,” she said while visiting the Mainland Affairs Council, where she served as minister for four years until 2004.
But Tsai also highlighted a policy change when her China-sceptic Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) takes over the government from the Beijing-friendly Kuomintang party.
Before January’s presidential vote Tsai accused the Kuomintang government of handling relations with China through an opaque process not properly overseen by parliament.
There was another bout of diplomatic sparring when Malaysia deported 20 Taiwanese fraud suspects to Taiwan, even though Chinese authorities said their offences were committed on the mainland.
Read: Taiwanese Deported from Kenya ‘Suspected of Fraud in China’
Observers say China is stepping up pressure on Tsai because it does not trust her party, which has historically been pro-independence.
Ties improved markedly after the Kuomintang’s Ma Ying-jeou came to power in 2008, pledging to strengthen trade and tourism links. He was re-elected in 2012.
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