China taking advantage of Taiwan\'s openness\, warns Tsai

China taking advantage of Taiwan's openness, warns Tsai

AFP  |  Taipei 

China's manipulation of Taiwan's democratic openness is the biggest threat to the island's security, said Tuesday, as she called on to seek peaceful means to solve their differences.

Tsai's comments came a day before Chinese is due to give a landmark speech on It will be closely watched on the island where many have been rattled by the Chinese leader's increasingly muscular rhetoric.

still sees democratic as part of its territory to be reunified by force if necessary, despite the two sides being ruled separately since the end of a civil war on the mainland in 1949. has cut off official communication with and stepped up military and diplomatic pressure.

In a speech, Tsai called for to come to the table but she warned that Taiwan's people would never give up the kind of freedoms unseen on the authoritarian mainland.

"What we need is for the two sides to understand and face the reality that both sides are fundamentally different in their values, lifestyles, and political system," she said.

Beijing, she added, "must respect the insistence of 23 million people for freedom and democracy" and "must use peaceful and equal terms to handle our differences".

She also accused the and businesses of taking advantage of Taiwan's open society.

"Taiwan's biggest challenge at the moment is especially from .. where it is using our (Taiwan's) democratic system of openness and freedom," she said, citing an influx of viral fake about Taiwan from the mainland as one example.

She also said China had not kept Taiwan adequately informed of outbreaks, something she said could hurt local businesses and sow mistrust.

Xi's speech on Wednesday marks the 40th anniversary of the "Message to Compatriots in Taiwan", an open letter from China's communist rulers during the reformist era which led to a warming of cross-strait ties.

But Xi has adopted a markedly more confrontational foreign policy in recent years and frequently refers to his desire to unite Taiwan with the mainland soon.

While Tsai has refused to recognise Beijing's "one China" policy she has walked a careful path within her own party, where some members openly Taiwan declaring independence -- a major red line for China.

In her New Year's speech she reiterated that her government was open to direct talks. Tsai's ruling received a bloody nose in local polls in November and she faces a in 2020.

The main opposition won a string of key mayoralties in the November ballot and favours much friendlier ties with Beijing.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, January 01 2019. 11:00 IST