China state media warns Taiwan president-elect against 'hypocrisy'

Taiwan opposition leader and president-elect Tsai Ing-wen gestures during an interview before their meeting for parliament reform in Taipei, Taiwan, Jan 20, 2016. PHOTO: EPA
Taiwanese president-elect Tsai Ing-wen has been warned against pursuing a pro-independence path. PHOTO: EPA

BEIJING (AFP) - China's state-run media on Monday (Jan 18) warned Taiwanese president-elect Tsai Ing-wen against pursuing a pro-independence path and that a formal split from the mainland would be a "dead end".

Ms Tsai and her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) won a landslide victory on Saturday as voters turned their backs on closer China ties.

The DPP has traditionally backed independence for the island, but Ms Tsai has moderated its rhetoric, promising to maintain the "status quo".

But Mr Zhou Zhihuai, head of the Institute of Taiwan Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, wrote in the Chinese-language edition of the Global Times that if Ms Tsai "parts ways with the mainland, she will go down a dead end".

Beijing "will not hold unrealistic delusions" about her, he added, saying that whether cross-strait relations take "the road of peace or antagonism, it's up to Tsai Ing-wen to make the choice".

Although Taiwan is self-ruling after it split with China following a civil war in 1949, it has never declared independence and Beijing still sees it as part of its territory awaiting reunification.

Taiwanese support for Ms Tsai and the DPP surged after voters became increasingly uneasy about a rapprochement with China under outgoing President Ma Ying-jeou of the Kuomintang.

Ms Tsai wasted no time in warning China that "suppression" would harm cross-strait ties, in her first comments to international media following her win, adding that "our democratic system, national identity and international space must be respected".

In the English-language edition of Global Times, columnist Zhang Hua - from the same institution as Mr Zhou - accused Ms Tsai of a "hypocritical cover-up for her pro-independence advocacy".

An editorial in Monday's English-language China Daily newspaper insisted that the Kuomintang lost the election due to issues such as rising unemployment and inequality, rather than its Beijing-friendly approach.

But it added that Ms Tsai's policy towards the mainland "remains ambiguous".

"She has a responsibility to keep the peaceful development of cross-Straits relations on track," it said.

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