China says Taiwan’s leader ‘hell bent’ on independence
BEIJING: China on Thursday (Oct 10) condemned Taiwan leader Lai Ching-te for being “hell bent” on independence, after he vowed to “resist annexation” in a speech marking the self-ruled island’s National Day.
Lai’s speech “exposed his hell-bent position on Taiwan independence and his sinister intention to escalate tensions in the Taiwan Strait for political self-interest”, China’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning told a regular press briefing.
China has not ruled out using force to bring the democratic island under its control, which Lai and his government oppose.
“Taiwan has never been a country and can never become one, so it does not have any so-called ‘sovereignty’,” Mao said.
She added that Lai’s comments “arbitrarily severed the historical connection between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait” and used “all manner of tactics to peddle the fantasy of Taiwan independence”.
In his speech, Lai pledged to defend the island’s “national sovereignty”.
But he also said Taipei’s efforts to preserve the “status quo of peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait remain unchanged”.
Source: CNA