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TAIWAN NEWS
Malaysia deports Taiwanese to Taiwan 'despite China request'
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) April 15, 2016


China parades detained Taiwanese on state TV
Beijing (AFP) April 15, 2016 - China's state media on Friday showed Taiwanese deported from Kenya to mainland China "confessing" to fraud while under police detention, the latest development in a case which has enraged Taipei.

Kenyan police deported 45 Taiwanese to China's mainland this week. Taipei said that several of them had been acquitted of crimes in the African country, accusing Beijing of "abduction".

China's state broadcaster CCTV showed two Taiwanese suspects in a Beijing detention centre apparently admitting to crimes under police interrogation.

Such confessions have become common in Chinese state-media in recent years. Lawyers say they deny defendants the right to a fair trial.

CCTV said the Taiwanese suspects had pretended to be officials to gain personal details from mainland citizens.

"I impersonated Beijing police," CCTV showed one Taiwanese man surnamed Jian as saying.

A Taiwanese man whose surname was given as Xu was shown saying that "because I had committed fraud previously... I was responsible for impersonations".

Earlier state media showed the suspects on a flight to China, wearing hoods and flanked by Chinese police officers.

China considers Taiwan to be one of its provinces awaiting reunification, by force if necessary, though the island has ruled itself since a civil war split in 1949.

Relations have often been tense, and the landslide election victory of independence-leaning Tsai Ing-wen in January's presidential poll raised fears that Beijing would seek to assert its stance more forcefully.

China's public security ministry said this week that Beijing had "legal rights of jurisdiction" over the Taiwanese suspects.

Taipei earlier said that "officials from the Chinese mainland abducted" the first group of citizens, who were deported at the weekend.

Taiwan said it had filed suit against officials in Kenya for ignoring a court decision which cleared some of the suspects and "illegally cooperating with mainland personnel to deport them to China".

Malaysia Friday deported 20 Taiwanese implicated in fraud back to Taiwan despite Beijing seeking to have them sent to mainland China, Taipei said, in a new bout of diplomatic sparring between the rivals.

The latest incident involved a group of 52 Taiwanese, some of whom were due to be deported to Taiwan on Friday as China allegedly intervened, just days after Taipei accused Beijing of "abducting" its citizens from Kenya.

"According to our understanding Malaysia was willing to return them to Taiwan but China later expressed their wish for them to be sent to China since the subjects of fraud are in the mainland just as in the Kenya case," Premier Chang San-cheng told reporters.

Taiwan's foreign ministry said late Friday Malaysia had deported 20 of them to Taiwan following negotiations.

Taipei "will continue to negotiate with the Malaysian government so the remaining 32 Taiwanese suspects can return to our country soon to face investigation," it said in a statement.

According to Taiwan's foreign ministry, the Taiwanese were detained by Malaysian police last month during five raids linked to telecom fraud, which also led to the arrests of 65 mainland Chinese and two Malaysians.

Malaysian and Chinese officials did not have immediate comment on the case.

Taipei this week blasted Beijing for being "rude and violent" over the deportation of 45 of its citizens from Kenya to China where they face investigation for fraud.

It has also filed a suit against several top officials in Kenya for ignoring a court decision which cleared some of the suspects and "illegally cooperating" with China to deport the Taiwanese.

Taiwan's government said it planned to send a delegation to the mainland on Monday at the earliest to discuss the Kenyan deportations.

Taipei has been increasingly isolated on the diplomatic stage with just 22 states recognising it after Gambia last month resumed ties with Beijing.

Observers say China is stepping up pressure on Taiwan's president-elect Tsai Ing-wen who is set to take office in May as Beijing does not trust her historically pro-independence party.

China considers Taiwan to be one of its provinces awaiting reunification, by force if necessary, even though the island has ruled itself since 1949 following a civil war split.


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Previous Report
TAIWAN NEWS
Taiwan accuses China of abducting Taiwanese from Kenya
Taipei (AFP) April 11, 2016
Taiwan accused China Monday of kidnapping eight Taiwanese who had been cleared of criminal charges by a court in Kenya, and angrily demanded their immediate return from the mainland. The alleged abduction - described by Taiwan's foreign ministry as "illegal" and "uncivilised" - posed a potential challenge to president-elect Tsai Ing-wen, who takes office next month. Kenyan authoriti ... read more


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