China sends Taiwan barbed 2016 greeting

Its warning comes ahead of Jan polls likely to be won by independence-leaning opposition

Chinese President Xi Jinping (right) shakes hands with Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou before their meeting in Singapore on Nov 7, 2015. PHOTO: AFP

BEIJING (REUTERS) - China's top official in charge of relations with self-ruled Taiwan has warned of "complex changes" ahead in ties with the island, which is likely to return the independence-leaning opposition to power in mid-January polls.

Nationalist forces fled to Taiwan after losing the Chinese civil war with the communists in 1949. Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring what it deems a renegade province under its control.

Taiwan's opposition Democratic Progressive Party is expected to win the Jan 16 presidential election. China says it will never countenance an independent Taiwan.

Mr Zhang Zhijun, head of China's Taiwan Affairs Office, said in his New Year greeting to Taiwan's people that 2016 will be marked by "complex changes across the Taiwan Strait and new challenges in cross-strait ties".

"I sincerely hope relations across the Taiwan Strait continue to maintain their trend of peaceful development and that the results of this won't slip away now they have been achieved," he said in a statement on the office's website yesterday.

People on both sides must be on high alert to "oppose any pro-independence separatist attempts to split Taiwan from China and to sabotage peace and stability", Mr Zhang added. "When it comes to the important issue of safeguarding the country's sovereignty and territorial integrity, our will is unswerving and firm as a rock."

Cross-strait relations have improved rapidly since Kuomintang's Mr Ma Ying-jeou became Taiwan's President in 2008, and the two sides have signed a series of landmark trade and tourism deals. Mr Ma and Chinese President Xi Jinping held a landmark meeting in Singapore in November.

Even without the prospect of an opposition election win, deep suspicions remain. China reacted angrily last month to the latest US plans to sell Taiwan weapons.

"Let's not wait until the road light has been extinguished before we feel its brightness, and let's not wait until the fruits of peace and development have been lost before we realise their value," Mr Zhang said.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on January 01, 2016, with the headline China sends Taiwan barbed 2016 greeting. Subscribe