Source:
https://scmp.com/news/china/politics/article/3040793/taiwan-not-top-priority-beijing-because-its-too-distracted
China/ Politics

Taiwan not a top priority for Beijing because it’s too distracted, Taipei mayor says

  • Mainland China has other issues to worry about, including protest-hit Hong Kong and a slowing economy, according to Ko Wen-je
  • He also says US wouldn’t let the self-ruled island become formally independent or be taken over by the mainland
Taipei mayor Ko Wen-je said Taiwan was “not on the top of the priority list” for Beijing. Photo: Reuters

Beijing has too many other issues to worry about at the moment – from protests in Hong Kong to a slowing economy – to give much thought to Taiwan, the mayor of Taipei, sometimes seen as a potential future president, said on Thursday.

Taipei mayor Ko Wen-je, who has advocated for better relations with the mainland, said that while Taiwan was important to the mainland, it was not currently the “core issue” that Beijing likes to portray.

“They say that Taiwan is a core issue, but I’m very clear that it isn’t. Taiwan is not China’s core issue,” he said.

“In comparison to Hong Kong, to Xinjiang, Taiwan is not on the top of the priority list. For mainland China, there are their economic problems, their GDP has already fallen to below 7 per cent,” Ko added in an interview, where he switched between Mandarin and English.

Hong Kong has been rocked by anti-government protests for nearly six months, the biggest challenge to President Xi Jinping since he took charge in 2012. China has come under international opprobrium for locking up a million or more Muslims in the western region of Xinjiang as part of what it calls a deradicalisation programme.

In any case, Ko said, the United States – Taiwan’s most important international backer even in the absence of diplomatic ties – would not let Taiwan become formally independent or be taken over by the mainland.

Ko Wen-je waves to supporters as he announces the launch of the Taiwan People’s Party in August. Photo: EPA-EFE
Ko Wen-je waves to supporters as he announces the launch of the Taiwan People’s Party in August. Photo: EPA-EFE

While the 60-year-old Ko decided not to run for the presidency for elections scheduled for January 11, the position he holds is traditionally a stepping stone to the presidency. The three presidents preceding current leader President Tsai Ing-wen all served as Taipei mayor.

If Tsai wins re-election – and polling is on her side – she cannot then stand for a third term in 2024.

Ko, who this year formed a new political party, the Taiwan People’s Party, said it was still too early for him to say if he would run in 2024, adding he would decide when his mayoral term ran out in three years.

“Do what you should do now and let God decide,” he said.

A surgeon turned politician, Ko is known for his colourful personal style. Last year he made a rap video for his mayoral re-election campaign called “Do the right thing”, which quickly went viral.

Ko has sought his own path between Taiwan’s two main parties, Tsai’s pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party and the Kuomintang, which favours close ties with China.

Visiting the United States earlier this year, Ko told the conservative Heritage Foundation that Taiwan can be close to the United States but also friendly with China.

In July, Ko also went to Shanghai to meet the city’s mayor, Ying Yong. While there, he reiterated previous comments that the two sides of the Taiwan Strait “are one family”.

Ko said he had no plans so far to go to the mainland next year.

Senior Chinese leaders are always on their guard in such meetings, as if you make a mistake in the mainland “you will be disappeared from the world”, he added, with a laugh.

“They were very, very nervous when they talked with me. Because I’m very unpredictable. We’re very easy. We say what we think. They can’t. They’re very rigid.”