KMT legislators vote
down protest to China
By Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff reporter
Legislators hold up “for” and
“against” signs at a vote on disputed issues in the legislature during a
legislative session yesterday.
Photo: Chu Pei-hsiung, Taipei Times
Although the Mainland Affairs Council
(MAC) has expressed discontent with China’s “unacceptable” reply to a letter of
protest filed by Taiwan over its new passport, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT)
lawmakers yesterday in a vote in the legislature failed to pass a resolution
asking China to respect the nation’s territorial sovereignty.
The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU)
caucuses yesterday co-initiated a resolution which would have been able to
ratchet up pressure on China over its new passports, which bear images of two
famous Taiwanese tourist destinations and include a map of the disputed South
China Sea as part of its territory.
At the plenary session, the DPP and the TSU proposed that the draft resolution
be placed on the agenda for discussion, but was voted down 42 to 57, with two
abstentions.
The parties raised three demands. They were that the legislature adopt a
resolution condemning China over the passport; that President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九)
call an international press conference within a week to address the matter; and
that the Executive Yuan refuse to recognize the new Chinese passport as a valid
travel document to apply for entry into Taiwan.
The Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) last week wrote a letter to its Chinese
counterpart, the Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS), to
lodge the nation’s protest against the passport.
According to MAC Minister Wang Yu-chi (王郁琦), ARATS dismissed the objection and
said that the design of the new passport only became an issue after
“pro-independence activists” had “made a fuss” over the matter.
At a meeting of the legislature’s Internal Administration Committee, Wang said
that the way Beijing had handled the matter was “unacceptable” and that the MAC
would continue to tell China how Taiwanese people felt about its new passport.
Despite these protestations, the policy was not followed by action, at least not
in the vote in the legislature.
KMT legislative caucus whip Wu Yu-sheng (吳育昇) said the KMT voted against the
proposal because it not only did not help to resolve the issue, but would
complicate the matter by causing confrontations between Taiwan and China.
“We are not satisfied with the passports either, but the SEF and the MAC have
been working on finding a solution,” Wu said.
Following the vote, some DPP lawmakers called a press conference to lash out at
the KMT over its “cowardice in acquiescing to China’s arbitrary behavior.”
That the proposal was blocked by the KMT proved that Ma’s pledge to safeguard
the nation’s sovereignty was just rhetoric, DPP Legislator Chen Chi-mai (陳其邁)
said.
“[China] has spat in our face, but President Ma was not indignant about this and
did nothing to protest. That’s why China continues to encroach on our
sovereignty,” he said.
The government must take resolute and effective action to protect the nation’s
sovereignty from being undermined, and not just pay lip service, Chen said.
|