TAIWAN
Taiwan's president changes stance on independence
Eva Cheng
8 March 2007
After promising during his 2000 inauguration not to push for Taiwanese independence, a commitment reaffirmed after his 2004 re-election, President Chen Shuibian reversed his stance hours before Chinas annual parliamentary session the National Peoples Congress started on March 5.
Addressing a March 4 dinner of the pro-independence Formosan Association for Public Affairs, Chen put forward the so-called Four wants and one no doctrine that Taiwan wants to be independent, to change its official designation from the Republic of China to Taiwan, and to have a new constitution that spells out its independent statehood; and that it wants development. The one no assertion states theres no division in Taiwan along the right-left political axis, only along the question of independence from or re-unification with China.
Chens new statement represents a major reversal from his 2000 pledge that as long as Beijing didnt use force against Taiwan, he wouldnt push for Taiwanese independence during his term and would abolish neither the National Unification Council nor the National Unification Guidelines.
Though Taiwans presidential election isnt due until March 2008, electioneering is already underway. Having served two terms, Chen isnt eligible for re-election but he seems keen to give a hand to the yet-to-be-selected candidate of his Democratic Progressive Party. The DPPs electoral appeal has flagged since financial scandals associated with Chens wife and his aides erupted last June.
Taiwans United Daily News broke the news on March 6 that the country had conducted a secret missile test on February 2, an event allegedly attended by Chen. The missiles have a range of up to 1000 kilometres, allowing them to reach Chinas premier financial centres, Shanghai and Hong Kong.
Both of Taiwans main opposition parties the Kuomintang and the People First Party have condemned Chens change in stance, as has Chinas foreign minister Li Zhaoxing, who said: Whoever wants to split away will become a criminal in history.
US State Department spokesperson Sean McCormack said on March 5 he expected Chen to uphold his pledge to not move Taiwan towards independence, cautioning that any rhetoric that raises doubts regarding this is unhelpful.