Source:
https://scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3187682/weve-lived-taiwan-strait-tensions-decades-chinese-coastal
China/ Diplomacy

‘We’ve lived with Taiwan Strait tensions for decades’: Chinese coastal residents unfazed by risk of conflict

  • Beachgoers in the city of Xiamen, which overlooks Taiwenese-controlled islands, shrug off fears of escalation as they continue to go about their daily lives
  • The Chinese military has started a series of major drills in the Taiwan Strait following the visit of US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
A couple prepare for a wedding photo shoot on the beach in Xiamen, with Taiwan’s Quemoy islands visible in the background. Photo: AFP

On a beach in the Chinese coastal city of Xiamen, just a few kilometres from an island controlled by the Taiwanese authorities, life is carefree despite some of the worst cross-strait tensions in decades.

Ignoring stark warnings from Beijing, US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi arrived late Tuesday in Taiwan – the highest-ranking elected US official to visit the island in 25 years – sparking a diplomatic firestorm.

China on Thursday launched some of its largest-ever military drills in response – exercises set to disrupt one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.

But on Xiamen’s palm-fringed beach, on the west side of the 200km (120-mile) strait that separates Taiwan from the Chinese mainland, there is little concern.

“A war? No, I don’t care,” a young IT worker surnamed Hwang said as he took a lunchtime stroll.

“As residents of Fujian, we’re used to tensions in the Taiwan Strait. We’ve lived with them for decades,” he added, referencing the frequent flare-ups that have happened since the 1950s.

China’s eastern Fujian province lies just across the sea from Taiwan, and the two share cultural ties as well as a common Chinese dialect.

“Something could happen at any moment. But the probability is low, so we aren’t worried,” Hwang said. “But Pelosi’s visit breaks the balance that there was.”

Unfazed by the news, young newlyweds smiled for photos, people walked their dogs, and children played in the sand.

“I think and I hope there won’t be a war,” Zheng Dahai, a 30-year-old who brought his son to set up a tent on the beach and have a bite to eat, said.

“A conflict would have repercussions on us, our lives, there might even be injuries.”

A man looks at Quemoy through a pair of binoculars in Xiamen. Photo: AFP
A man looks at Quemoy through a pair of binoculars in Xiamen. Photo: AFP

Behind him, 6km offshore, is the island of Quemoy, also known as Kinmen, home to just over 100,000 people.

In a twist of history, Chinese Communist forces have never managed to conquer the island, meaning it remains under Taiwan’s control.

This makes this beach one of the few places where the military forces of the mainland and the island face each other at such a short distance.

War scarred bunkers on Quemoy reflect the islands’ frontline role in Taiwan Strait tension

00:00

War scarred bunkers on Quemoy reflect the islands’ frontline role in Taiwan Strait tension

If a war were to break out, this would be ground zero.

“We don’t want war. We want to live in peace and mutual respect,” said a retiree who comes here to swim every day, including in winter.

“On the other hand, if you don’t respect me, if you come to bully me, then that’s another story. If the other is strong or not, even me, an old man, I will fight!”

Further away, two tourists took a selfie in front of a monument emblematic of Xiamen’s unique location: eight Chinese characters, several metres high, that form a patriotic slogan addressed to the Taiwanese authorities on the other side.

It reads “one country, two systems: reunify China” – reference to the political compromise that saw Hong Kong and Macau returned to the mainland’s rule in the 1990s.

Social media users shared images of Chinese Type 63A light ampibious tanks on a beach in Xiamen. Photo: Weibo
Social media users shared images of Chinese Type 63A light ampibious tanks on a beach in Xiamen. Photo: Weibo

“Taiwan is an inseparable part of China,” Hu, a 40-year-old in a yellow tank top who came to run on the seafront, said.

“Sooner or later, it will return” to the motherland, he declared calmly before continuing his stretches.