Taipei - Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian, in his latest bid
to tell the world that Taiwan is not part of China and deserves UN
membership, led a torch relay Wednesday.
'Joining UN is the common aspiration of the 23 million Taiwan
people,' Chen said before kicking off the torch relay from the
presidential office in Taipei.
'This torch relay is to show our condemnation against China's
using the 2008 Beijing Olympics to downgrade and belittle Taiwan's
status,' he added.
Chen, wearing a white T-shirt and holding the flaming torch, ran a
few hundred metres before handing the torch to another official.
Taiwan recently declared October 24 UN Day and a national holiday
in honour of the UN Charter being signed on October 24, 1945.
Holding Wednesday's torch relay is meant to counter the
1,200-kilometre Olympic torch relay that will take 11 days, passing
through
25 cities and counties as well as a warm-up for a referendum on
Taiwan joining the UN to be held on March 22, 2008.
Taiwan and China split in 1949 when the Republic of China (ROC)
government lost the Chinese Civil War to the Communists and fled to
Taiwan to set up its government-in-exile.
The ROC government continued to hold China's seat in the UN until
1971 when the UN expelled Taipei to accept Beijing as the legitimate
government of China.
Taiwan launched an international campaign to join the UN in 1993
but has failed each year due to opposition from China, one of the
five permanent members of the UN Security Council which have the veto
power.
In an attempt to improve its chances of joining the UN, in
September Chen's government submitted an application to join the UN
as a new member called Taiwan.
The move has triggered sharp reaction from China because Beijing
sees Taiwan's applying to join the UN under the name of 'Taiwan'
instead of its formal title 'ROC' as a step towards changing its name
to pave the way for formal separation from China.
China sees Taiwan as its breakaway province awaiting reunification
with the mainland and has warned Taiwan that Beijing will use force
if Taipei declares independence or indefinitely delays unification
talks with Beijing.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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