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TAIPEI - TAIWAN'S election authorities said on Friday the island would hold a referendum on joining the United Nations under the name 'Taiwan' on Mar 22, the same day as presidential election.
The referendum will ask whether voters 'agree that the government should seek to join the UN in the name of Taiwan to express Taiwanese people's will and enhance Taiwan's international status and participation,' the Central Election Commission said in a notice on its website.
The commission also gave the green light to a separate referendum proposed
by the opposition Kuomintang (KMT) on whether Taiwan should seek to 'return to
the UN with a pragmatic and flexible approach,' also alongside the presidential
vote.
In the KMT's version, Taiwan should attempt to join the UN and other
international organisations either under its official title 'the Republic of
China' or 'Taiwan,' or any other suitable name.
The independence-leaning ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) has been
pushing for the controversial referendum despite strong oppositions by Beijing
and the island's key ally Washington.
'From the perspective of the United States, the conduct of such a
referendum is a mistake,' US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte said
last month.
'We think it is a provocative policy on the part of the Taiwanese
authorities and we think that it certainly would have been preferable had not
such a referendum been scheduled.'
The DPP has long said it intended to have a UN referendum at the same time
as the March vote, but it had not been rubber-stamped.
The DPP suffered a crushing defeat in last month's legislative elections,
with the KMT winning 81 seats of 113 seats against the DPP's 27, while KMT
allies also took the remaining five.
Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian has vigorously defended the proposed
referendum, saying 'there is absolutely no provocative policy but only a policy
that respects public opinions.' -- AFP
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