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Taiwanese anti-China groups vow protests

Taiwan cardinal set for historic China trip
Taipei (AFP) Feb 15, 2011 - Taiwan's Catholic Cardinal Paul Shan will make a historic visit to China this year in the first contact between Catholics on the two sides in more than 60 years, the organiser of his trip said Tuesday. Shan, who was born 88 years ago on the mainland, is expected to hold a joint mass with Shanghai Bishop Aloysius Jin Luxian in June, said organiser Chou Chin-huar.

He is also scheduled to visit universities in Shanghai and Xiamen to promote his fight against lung cancer, said Chou, head of cancer charity the Chou Ta-Kuan Foundation in Taipei. In his native city of Zhengzhou in central China, Shan will visit his family tombs and hold a "dialogue of life" with Taiwan's hi-tech firm Foxconn, which has been plagued by a spate of employee suicides in recent years. "This will be an ice-breaking trip as Catholics on the two sides have not been in contact before," Chou told AFP. "We have been working very hard for this trip to take place," he said, adding that the visit was set after a meeting between Shan and Wang Zuoan, head of China's Religious Affairs Bureau, in Taiwan last year.

However, Shan's week-long trip will not include Beijing due to "political sensitivity," Chou said. The Vatican and China have not had formal diplomatic ties since 1951 when the Holy See's recognition of Taiwan sparked anger in Beijing. The Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association does not acknowledge the authority of Pope Benedict XVI and is fiercely opposed to the "clandestine" Catholic Church clergy loyal to the pontiff. China has about five million Catholics who worship at Communist Party-sanctioned "official" churches, while up to 11 million reportedly worship at "underground" churches not sanctioned by the government. A brief war of words erupted between Beijing and the Vatican in December, with China rebuffing criticism by the pope of its curbs on practising Catholics and of the state-sanctioned Chinese church.
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) Feb 15, 2011
Radical anti-China groups in Taiwan said Tuesday they plan to mobilise thousands of protesters when a top Chinese negotiator visits the island's south, a stronghold of pro-independence forces.

Chen Yunlin, chief of China's Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait, is expected to arrive in Taipei on February 23 and visit the island's biggest city in the south, Kaohsiung, for the first time the next day.

The planned trip to the south could provoke pro-independence activists who regard the south as the island's last bastion not yet penetrated by Chinese influence.

"Taiwan is not part of China, and our demonstrations are aimed to make him aware of this," Cheng Cheng-yu, a spokesman for the Taiwan South Society, told AFP.

"If he is allowed to come and go freely in Kaohsiung just like he did in Taipei before, then more ranking Chinese government officials are likely to follow in his footsteps. We can't allow this."

Cheng said he expected "more than 10,000" to take to Kaohsiung's streets.

Chen Yunlin's itinerary has yet to be made public, but local media said he is expected to visit Tainan, another city noted for its anti-China sentiments, as well as Chiayi city.

His previous visits to Taiwan had sparked protests from those who feared that closer ties with the giant neighbour could erode the island's de facto sovereignty.

In the absence of official contacts between the two sides, Chen Yunlin's semi-official association is authorised by Beijing to handle civilian exchanges with Taiwan.

China still claims Taiwan as part of its territory awaiting unification, by force if necessary, even though the two sides have been governed separately since the end of a civil war in 1949.

However, ties have improved markedly since Ma Ying-jeou of the China-friendly Kuomintang party took office in 2008.

earlier related report
At least 10 Chinese moles infiltrate Taiwan: report
Taipei (AFP) Feb 14, 2011 - At least 10 Chinese moles are believed to have penetrated Taiwan's national security units, a retired agent told media Monday, as the island reels from its worst espionage case in half a century.

The warning came after Taiwan arrested army major general Lo Hsien-che on charges of spying for China, which is still technically at war with the island despite reduced tensions in recent years.

"Some of the suspected Chinese agents have not yet been arrested as the authorities are short of solid evidence against them, even though they have been closely monitored for some time," the retired agent, whose name was not given, told the China Times.

Others have been left to believe they are safe "for strategic reasons", he said, implying that they could be used, for example by security forces feeding the agents wrong information in the hope it would be passed on to China.

He warned that since Lo had escaped detection by Taiwanese security forces for nine years before his arrest, his case might just be the tip of an iceberg.

"Many more spies for the Chinese mainland might have gone undetected.... The extent of the infiltration into Taiwan's government units may be worse than imagined."

Lo was recruited by China while stationed in Thailand between 2002 and 2005 and was detained late last month.

Meanwhile, the Taipei-based Liberty Times newspaper reported that Lo had confessed to spying for China.

The paper also reported that China seems to have engineered Lo's rise in the Taiwanese bureaucracy.

Lo appeared to have received tip-offs from Beijing regarding Chinese intelligence operations in Thailand and other Southeast Asian countries, helping him win the trust of his superiors, it said.

At the time of his arrest, the 51-year-old was head of the army's telecommunications and electronic information department, Taiwan's defence ministry has said.

It remains unclear how much harm Lo caused Taiwan's military, but given the sensitive affairs he was in charge of, the impact of the affair is thought likely to be serious.



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TAIWAN NEWS
At least 10 Chinese moles infiltrate Taiwan: report
Taipei (AFP) Feb 14, 2011
At least 10 Chinese moles are believed to have penetrated Taiwan's national security units, a retired agent told media Monday, as the island reels from its worst espionage case in half a century. The warning came after Taiwan arrested army major general Lo Hsien-che on charges of spying for China, which is still technically at war with the island despite reduced tensions in recent years. ... read more







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