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Manila officials discuss China
deportation case
REACTION:The DPP said Manila¡¦s deportation of 14 Taiwanese
to China proved Taipei¡¦s policies have led others to believe Beijing has right
of governance
By Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff reporter
The Philippine government held an extraordinary meeting yesterday after Taipei
lodged a protest over the deportation to China of 14 Taiwanese allegedly
involved in an international fraud ring, a Taiwanese government official said on
condition of anonymity, adding that Taiwan would monitor how Manila handles the
matter.
The Philippine government has yet to respond formally to the protest made by
Taipei on Wednesday, including a strongly worded statement that Taiwan could
re-examine bilateral relations and suspend exchanges over the controversy.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs also sent a letter of protest to Philippine
President Benigno Aquino III.
Deputy Representative of the Philippines in Taipei Carlo Aquino apologized to
Taiwan when he was summoned by Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Shen Ssu-tsun
(¨H´µ²E) on Wednesday afternoon, ministry deputy spokesman Steve Shia (®L©u©÷) told
the Taipei Times by telephone.
Philippine Representative to Taiwan Antonio Basilio returned to Manila on
Wednesday morning to deal with the matter, Shia said.
Basilio had been summoned to meet foreign ministry officials before he left and
was clearly aware of Taiwan¡¦s position that the Philippines had no right to
deport the 14 Taiwanese to China, Shia said.
The Taiwanese, along with 10 Chinese, were arrested on Dec. 27 in Manila on
suspicion of swindling NT$600 million (US$20.6 million) through a scam that
largely targeted Chinese.
Approached for comment yesterday, Premier Wu Den-yih (§d´°¸q) said the Philippines
had ignored international practice by extraditing the Taiwanese to China and had
shown ¡§disrespect¡¨ to Taiwan by ¡§failing to cherish the friendship between the
two countries.¡¨
Wu said he had asked the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) and the Straits Exchange
Foundation to negotiate with China to ensure the return of the Taiwanese to
Taipei.
The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) yesterday accused the government of
cowardice, accused China of making an outrageous demand and said the deportation
was deplorable.
The DPP statement demanded the government look into possible neglect by Taiwan¡¦s
diplomats leading to the extradition and that it do everything in its power to
ensure the 14 return to Taiwan as soon as possible.
Taipei was not active enough in its negotiations with Manila over the matter,
the DPP said, adding that asking the council to handle the mater by seeking
Beijing¡¦s assistance would turn a diplomatic matter involving two countries into
a cross-strait one.
The DPP called on Manila to appreciate the sensitivity of the matter and refrain
from playing into Beijing¡¦s hands.
The deportation shows that the government¡¦s pro-Beijing policy has led other
countries to conclude that Beijing has right of governance over Taiwan, the DPP
said.
¡§How can the government protect its people when its failure in diplomacy has
eroded the country¡¦s sovereignty to such an extent that [China now has]
extraterritorial rights?¡¨ the DPP said.
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