
Taiwan suspends Chinese newspaper’s right to station reporters in Taiwan
The Taiwanese government has suspended the rights of a Chinese newspaper and its parent company to station reporters in Taiwan. The Mainland Affairs Council says the Strait Herald is engaged in United Front infiltration and reporters from the newspaper, and its parent company, the Fujian Daily Newspaper Group, are no longer allowed to be posted here. China’s Taiwan Affairs Office is furious and has accused the “Lai Ching-te authorities” of trampling on democracy. Mainland Affairs Council minister Chiu Chui-cheng has shot back that Taiwan has true freedom of the press and China has no comprehension of what it is.
Click on the YouTube channel of the Strait Herald. Although its content mainly reports on cross-strait affairs, when it mentions China, it presents it as having a robust military, while reportage on the DPP and President Lai Ching-te is uniformly negative.
Yao Chang
YouTuber and activist
There are all kinds of fabrications, including boasting about China and disparaging Taiwan, publishing content that is suspicious of the US and Japan, and anti-US and anti-Japanese. It carries a lot of comments from Taiwanese pro-China social media influencers but at the same time, everyone should pay attention to the reporters from the Strait Herald, who are responsible for other tasks besides news gathering.
Yao Chang, an anti-Communist social media influencer from China argues that the Strait Herald reporter’s mission in Taiwan is not a straightforward one. In fact, the Mainland Affairs Council had noticed long ago that the Strait Herald was engaged in United Front work. The newspaper’s social affairs committee member Lin Jingdong had once accepted payment for fabricating polls in an intervention in Taiwan’s presidential election. Taiwan’s announcement that it would suspend the rights of the Strait Herald and its parent organization, the Fujian Daily Newspaper Group, to have reporters posted in Taiwan has made China’s Taiwan Affairs Office furious. It has accused the Mainland Affairs Council of making “baseless arguments” to slander the “legitimate actions of reporting on the news” carried out by a Chinese media reporter stationed in the country.
Chiu Chui-cheng
Mainland Affairs Council
We will first temporarily suspend the Strait Herald from posting reporters in Taiwan. Then we hope that the opening in the quota of permitted Chinese journalists will allow other mainland Chinese media to come here. Taiwan has freedom of speech, it has true press freedom. Mainland China saying that we don’t have press freedom invokes the Taoist adage that a summer insect cannot discuss ice as it has no knowledge of winter.
Mainland Affairs Council Minister Chiu Chui-cheng also took the opportunity to remind Taiwanese to be careful of falling into a Chinese United Front trap by applying for a Chinese ID card, as the losses would outweigh the gains.
Chiu Chui-cheng
Mainland Affairs Council
If you apply for an ID card on the other side of the strait, and you have household registration there, we will cancel your Taiwan household registration and your ID card. This would have an enormous impact, including your qualifications to receive national health insurance and long-term care, and including your rights related to citizenship and property. It will be a huge blow.
Statistics from the Mainland Affairs Council show a total of 679 people’s Taiwanese household registrations have been canceled in the past 10 years. However, Taiwanese YouTuber Pa Chiung claims there are more than 100,000 people in Taiwan with Chinese ID cards. Encompassing politics to economics, the media and the internet, China’s pervasive United Front operations have become the most serious challenge for President Lai Ching-te’s government.
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2025-01-03