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[Dunia] Dilema Sino, Taiwan Vs China

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Post time 26-5-2016 10:14 PM | Show all posts |Read mode
Hmmmm, makin panas isu Taiwan yang bertukar kepimpinan yang terkenal dengan kelantangan mereka menentang China, Parti DPP...teringat bekas leader mereka ni dulu tuuu, Chen Shui Bian, macam ada bayangan situasi Lim Toyo ketika ni pulak dengan bekas leader DPP ni, macam ada persamaan jerrrr.....

Media China dah mula dah serang peribadi President baru ni, apa lagi melihat President Tsai Ing-wen ni masih single tak berkahwin, tak layak kata China.....President Tsai ni khabarnya 75% Hakka dan 25% aborigin Taiwan yang tinggal kat kawasan bukit Taiwan tuuu, kena jaga2 ni dengan China, 2 pemimpin adik beradik cina Hakka pro US kat Thailand dah tumbang dengan permainan intel2 & lobbyist China, junta Thai pro-China mereka naikkan....

Ada rakyat mereka kata, "Mana Taiwan nak jual product2 mereka tanpa China, tiap tahun pun minimum 25% product mereka dijual ke China", "nak join TPPA tapi Taiwan sendiri belum lagi di iktiraf sebagai sebuah negara oleh PBB....."  



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World | Wed May 25, 2016 11:37pm EDT
Related: World, China


China says its people will never stand for Taiwan independence

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-taiwan-idUSKCN0YH08R


                                                                Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen addresses during an inauguration ceremony in Taipei, Taiwan May 20, 2016.
                                                                                                    Reuters/Tyrone Siu
                        


China's 1.3 billion people are united in their determination never to allow self-ruled Taiwan to become independent, China's top official in charge of ties with the island was quoted as saying on Thursday, in Beijing's latest blast at Taipei.

China has repeatedly warned Taiwan's pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party, whose leader Tsai Ing-wen assumed the presidency last week, of negative consequences if they fail to recognize Taiwan is a part of China under Beijing's "one China" principle.

Tsai has said democratic principles will rule Taiwan's ties with Beijing and urged China in her inaugural speech Friday to "set aside the baggage of history" and engage in positive dialogue.

Meeting a group of Taiwan business representatives in Beijing, Zhang Zhijun, head of China's Taiwan Affairs Office, said anything that goes against the "one China" principle would only bring tension and upheaval to ties.

"There is no future in Taiwan independence, and this cannot become an option for Taiwan's future. This is the conclusion of history," the official Xinhua news agency cited Zhang as saying.

"Some people say you must pay attention to broad public opinion in Taiwan, and that one can understand the attitude and feelings of Taiwan's people formed by its special historical experiences and social environment," Zhang added.

"But, Taiwan society ought to understand and attach importance to the feelings of the 1.37 billion residents of the mainland," he said.

China has regarded Taiwan as a wayward province, to be taken by force if necessary, ever since defeated Nationalists fled to Taiwan in 1949 after a civil war with China's Communists.

Referring to late 19th and early 20th century period when foreign powers strove to carve off bits of the declining Chinese empire for themselves, Zhang said China's people had a deep memory of that period of national weakness and humiliation.

"They have a rock-solid will that has remained consistent towards protecting national unity and not allowing the country to be split," he added.

The Mainland Affairs Council, Taiwan's ministerial agency in charge of ties with China, said in response to Zhang's comments that Tsai has said she is committed to ensuring the status quo in relations with China and to maintaining peace and stability.

China does not permit public discussion of views which challenge the notion of Taiwan being a part of China.

Taiwan was a Japanese colony from 1895-1945, having gained control of the island from imperial China.

Many Taiwanese have a broadly positive view of Japanese rule, saying it brought progress to an undeveloped, largely agricultural island.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by J.R. Wu in Taipei; Editing by Nick Macfie)


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Post time 26-5-2016 10:20 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Ada akak kesah?
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 Author| Post time 26-5-2016 10:24 PM | Show all posts
dah mula dahhh Goebells versi China, panazzzz.....


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Sexism Toward Taiwan’s New President
  • Matt Vasilogambros
  •                                                     May 25, 2016

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2016/05/taiwan-female-president/484295/


A Chinese military official described Tsai Ing-wen as “erratic” because she’s single.

A Chinese military official criticized Taiwan’s newly elected president as being “extremist” and “erratic” because of her single marital status.

Tsai Ing-wen, who was elected Friday as Taiwan’s first female president, represents a political party that leans toward independence from China. Her election prompted Wang Weixing, a senior scholar at the Academy of Military Sciences in Beijing, to write a scathing column on Tuesday in Xinhua, the state-run news agency.

In part, according to the BBC, Wang wrote:

    “As a single female politician, Tsai Ing-wen does not have the emotional burden of love, of ‘family’ or children so her political style and strategies are displayed to be more emotional, personal and extreme.”


The article was later removed following widespread regional condemnation for sexism. As The New York Times writes:

    The article threatened to become a public-relations blunder for the Communist Party, which has sought to win hearts and minds in Taiwan in recent years as it pushes for reunification…

    Throughout her political career, Ms. Tsai, a 59-year-old former law professor, has faced questions about her decision to remain single and not have children. In Chinese society, the pressure to marry can be intense, and families often look down on women who remain single into their late 20s.

Tsai has previously rejected the idea that there is only one China, a major point of contention between China and Taiwan. Taiwan separated from mainland China following the Chinese Civil War in 1949. China, however, regards it as a renegade province. Wang’s column could be a sign of increased tensions with Tsai’s new government.

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 Author| Post time 26-5-2016 10:35 PM | Show all posts
Dalam keadaan ekonomi dunia macam ni, Taiwan masih nak main politik ego lagi ke dengan big brother mereka sendiri kat Mainland??? growth prediction pun dah dekat2 sama dengan Singapore rupa nya, macamana kalau big brother main game sekat2 ekonomi macam US tu main, masak korang.....


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S & P sees Taiwan's 2016 GDP grow by weak 1.8%
2016/05/26 13:44:15

http://focustaiwan.tw/news/aeco/201605260006.aspx

Taipei, May 26 (CNA) Standard & Poor's, a U.S.-based ratings agency, said Thursday that Taiwan's gross domestic product is expected to grow just 1.8 percent in 2016, lagging behind its Asian rivals Hong Kong, South Korea and Singapore.

S& said that Taiwan will be the only economy among the four "Asian tigers" to post GDP growth below the 2 percent mark this year. According to S&, South Korea and Hong Kong are expected to see their GDPs grow by 2.7 percent, while the economy in Singapore could grow by 2.1 percent.

The ratings agency said that Taiwan is expected to continue to be haunted by falling global demand and the slower pace of China's economic growth. It added that Taiwan is also faced with the government's conservative fiscal policy, which is unlikely to give a significant boost the country's economy.

In addition to the GDP lagging behind the other three Asian tigers, S& said that Taiwan's economic growth for 2016 will fall behind the average of 2.4 percent to be posted by the emerging industrial economies in Asia as a whole.

However, the latest S& forecast for Taiwan's GDP growth for 2016 is still more optimistic than those of several local think tanks and even the government itself.

Among the pessimistic economic think tanks, the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research said that Taiwan's GDP could grow by only 1.27 percent, the lowest forecast so far, while the Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research  has anticipated that the economy will grow by 1.36 percent, and Yuanta-Polaris Research Institute has put its number at 1.42 percent.

The Directorate General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics (DGBAS) forecast in February that the GDP will grow 1.47 percent in 2016. However, many economists expected that the DGBAS will lower its forecast when it announces an update on Friday.

Switzerland-based banking group UBS, however, has left its forecast for Taiwan's 2016 GDP growth unchanged at 2 percent, since the U.S. economy is on the road to recovery and it is unlikely that China's economy will suffer a hard landing, despite slowing growth.

UBS said that the market has appeared too pessimistic about Taiwan's economy, adding that even though the country had a power transition May 20, the new government is unlikely to surprise the market by making any political decisions to undermine cross-Taiwan Strait ties. Instead, the new government will be gearing up to boost the local economy.

Citigroup, another major global banking group, said that Taiwan's economy will grow by only 1.3 percent in 2016, since there are few signs that the country's exports, which serve as the backbone of its economy, will pick up anytime soon.

Taiwan's exports in April fell 6.5 percent a year earlier from the previous year, marking the 15th consecutive month of a year-on-year fall, a stretch of negative growth even longer than that seen during the global financial crisis of 2008 and 2009.

Taiwan has also encountered escalating competition in the global market, Citigroup said, adding that political uncertainty is still depressing domestic demand.

But Citigroup said that Taiwan's GDP will improve in 2017 to grow by 2.0 percent from a year earlier.

(By Tsai Yi-chu and Frances Huang)
ENDITEM/J

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Post time 26-5-2016 10:39 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
China mmg tamak,selain taiwan laut china selatan,pulau2 jepun pun nak amik jugak,pernah jugak bperang dgn india berebut wilayah,mmg bangsa tamak
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 Author| Post time 26-5-2016 10:59 PM | Show all posts
Edited by dcruins at 26-5-2016 11:00 PM

Tak harian kalau kejap lagi gomen Taiwan akan umum naikkan budget defense mereka, China punya pasal daaaa....
tauke mesin perang America pasti ketawa gembira dapat contract baru.....

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 Author| Post time 27-5-2016 04:49 PM | Show all posts
hmmmmm,menarik gak survey ni walaupun ada yang tak percaya sangat dengan poll ni,layan jerrr laaaa....

siapa laaa agak nyaaa MP pembangkang pro China Taiwan yg bakal memulakan tradisi tumbuk menumbuk dalam parlimen untuk session baru nanti, MP parti DPP kena start training cara defend diri ni dalam dewan .....

boleh jadi berasap hidung pemerintah kat Beijing lihat survey ni, penganalisis mereka kena keluar statement cepat2 untuk mengecam survey ni .....

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Over half of Taiwanese favor independence: poll
2016/05/27 12:45:19

http://focustaiwan.tw/news/aipl/201605270005.aspx

Taipei, May 27 (CNA) More than 80 percent of local people identify with Taiwan, and over half of them favor independence for the country, according to a survey published Friday by a foundation.

The survey on the political attitudes of Taiwanese, conducted by the Taiwanese Public Opinion Foundation , showed that 80.8 percent of citizens identify themselves as Taiwanese, while 8.1 percent see themselves as Chinese, and 7.6 percent claim to be both Taiwanese and Chinese .

The survey also found that 51.2 percent think it would be better for Taiwan to become an independent country in the future, while 14.9 percent would prefer to see unification of the two sides of the Taiwan Strait.

Only 16 percent of Taiwanese agree with Chinese President XI Jinping's  view that "both Taiwan and the mainland belong to one China," according to the poll.

Beijing considers Taiwan part of China which should be reunified, by force if necessary.

It also showed that 66.4 percent of Taiwanese have a positive view of President Tsai Ing-wen , while 6.1 percent do not favor her.

In terms of party affiliation, 49.3 percent of Taiwanese identify with the ruling Democratic Progressive Party, 16.6 percent with the Kuomintang and 31.5 percent see themselves as swing voters.

The foundation, which was inaugurated in April, is chaired by You Ying-lung , a scholar and former deputy secretary general of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).

He is also a former deputy secretary-general of the Straits Exchange Foundation, a semi-official body that handles exchanges with China in the absence of formal ties.

You said the political views of Taiwanese, as conveyed in the poll, will greatly restrain the development of cross-strait relations.

There are scholars who are unsure of the credibility of the latest poll, however.

Frank Pen, dean of Shih Hsin University's College of Journalism and Communications, said that opinion polls often reflect a "constructed reality" rather than a fact and that in any case, public opinions tend to change.

The questionnaire used in the latest poll is suggestive, Pen said. One of the questions begins by quoting Chinese President Xi Jin-ping, he noted.

It the question began instead by "It is said...," then the result of the poll might be different, Pen said.

The survey, conducted May 23-24, collected 1,089 effective samples and had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.97 percentage points.

(By Yu Hsiao-han and Lilian Wu)
Enditem/pc





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Post time 27-5-2016 04:59 PM | Show all posts
Yg menariknya kedua pihak give face, and reconciliatory. option sentiasa terbuka bila di asak wartawan. walopon tsai sendiri pernah dilabel "pemisah".

satu sesi keynote oleh akademik taiwan yg juga merupakan bekas menteri pertahanan taiwan mengenengahkan konsep bahawa kedua2 tsai dan xi mempunyai matlamat yg overlapping - jadi outcome dia mestilah sesuatu yg boleh diterima kedua2 pihak.
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 Author| Post time 27-5-2016 05:09 PM | Show all posts
kasibiman replied at 27-5-2016 04:59 PM
Yg menariknya kedua pihak give face, and reconciliatory. option sentiasa terbuka bila di asak wartaw ...

kita tunggu apa permainan intel & lobbyist China di Taiwan nanti, permainan mereka berjaya di Thailand.....
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 Author| Post time 27-5-2016 05:18 PM | Show all posts
3 pemimpin Badut2 US kat Thailand dah kalah dengan badut2 China aka. junta thai, US takkan berdiam diri jerrr dengan Taiwan, kali ni mereka menang kat Taiwan.....

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From Chinese scholars on Taiwan, mixed views of cross-strait ties
2016/05/23 23:04:04

http://focustaiwan.tw/news/acs/201605230036.aspx

Beijing, May 23 (CNA) Chinese scholars on Monday had mixed views of cross-Taiwan Strait relations following the inauguration of President Tsai Ing-wen on May 20, but the majority opinion was that bilateral ties were in for a bumpy ride, at least in the near future.

Zhu Weidong , deputy director of the Taiwan Research Institute under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said at a forum in Beijing that cross-strait relations are at a crossroads, and if Taiwan veers away from the correct road, the path it takes will certainly be bumpy.

Because Tsai did not make clear her stance on the 1992 consensus in her inauguration speech, the cross-strait relationship could enter an uncertain phase, and to what extent the relationship deteriorates will hinge on Taiwan's stance toward the consensus, Zhu said.

Beijing has insisted that Tsai's government accept the "1992 consensus" that underpinned Taiwan-China relations during the eight years her predecessor, Ma Ying-jeou , was in office, something she and her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) have been unwilling to do.

Likening Taiwan and China to two trains, Zhu said that if the trains collide, Taiwan will be the bigger loser.

May 20 could be a turning point from which Taiwan's national power declines, and if the two sides continue grappling with each other, Taiwan will gradually lose its bargaining chips vis a vis China and cross-strait ties will enter a vicious cycle, Zhu contended.


Li Yihu , the head of Peking University's Institute of Taiwan Studies, said that while cross-strait relations may not undergo earthshaking changes, they are unlikely to develop smoothly given the greater uncertainty that exists.

Regarding Tsai's inauguration speech, Li argued that while Tsai adjusted her comments on the 1992 consensus, they were still not satisfactory.

He said he would continue to observe what she does rather than listen to what she says because she might adopt a strategy of "no talking but just taking action" in pushing her cross-strait policy.

Li said Taiwan's approach to issues such as the South China Sea and the East China Sea and how Tsai will treat desinicization and pro-Taiwan independence forces will be key areas that should be observed.

Huang Jiashu, a professor of Renmin University of China's School of International Studies, said that in the past, Taiwan's mainstream public opinion was maintaining the cross-strait status quo of "no unification, no independence, and no use of force."

After the peaceful development of cross-strait ties over the past seven years, however, Taiwan's mainstream public opinion has become "anti-unification and tolerance of independence" or "resistance to unification and de facto independence," Huang said.

With the rise of Taiwan's pro-independence forces on cross-strait relations, China has to uphold its "one China" principle bottom line, Huang argued.

(By Yin Chun-chieh and Evelyn Kao)
Enditem/ls

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 Author| Post time 27-5-2016 05:30 PM | Show all posts
Edited by dcruins at 27-5-2016 05:36 PM

Cita2 Taiwan untuk dikenali sebagai Taiwanesse di peringkat global secara halus dapat dilihat melalui satu siri TV komedi kat Amerika yang semakin mendapat sambutan hangat kat sana, tajuk siri komedi tu "Fresh of The Boat(2015)", aku dah tonton 1st Season siri ni, kelakar gak dengan tema Hip Hop 1990s dan sindiran2 terhadap budaya cina typical yang dah tak relevant di zaman modern, paling aku gelak masa 2 character parent ni piii "perm" rambut mereka, konon tuuu budaya cina yang success zaman tuuu untuk perm kan rambut sebagai simbol success, the succesful perm konon nya, yang macam Phua Chu Kang buat tu daaaa.....

Nampak nya Amerika semakin aggresive dengan propaganda Taiwan nya kat Amerika, agenda halus nyerrr mereka nak tunjuk beza cina Mainland dan Taiwan, licik gilerrr permainan America ni.....


  
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Post time 27-5-2016 07:16 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Awat aku teringat chu mei feng
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 Author| Post time 27-5-2016 07:22 PM | Show all posts
bioessence replied at 27-5-2016 07:16 PM
Awat aku teringat chu mei feng

sebab video tuuuuu laaaaa.......
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 Author| Post time 28-5-2016 10:26 AM | Show all posts
fuhhhh, ganas gak perang politik Sino ni,ni artikel dari media kepunyaan billionaire AliBaba Jack Ma, .....

sinis & lawak gilerrr artikel ni guna isu penggemar kucing dan penggemar anjing,bunyi nyerrr santai dan happy2,tapi sebenarnya  panazzzz......


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A tale of cats, dogs and cross-strait relations

Taiwan’s most famous feline lover Tsai Ing-wen is adopting three canines. Surely that’s a good sign for relations between the island and the mainland

PUBLISHED : Friday, 27 May, 2016, 11:29pm
UPDATED : Friday, 27 May, 2016, 11:29pm


http://www.scmp.com/comment/insight-opinion/article/1956856/tale-cats-dogs-and-cross-strait-relations

If men are from Mars and women are from Venus, then perhaps Taiwanese are cat persons while mainland Chinese are more like dog people.

The fact that Taiwan’s new president Tsai Ing-wen is a lifelong feline lover is surely a psychological fact at least as relevant – or irrelevant - to cross-strait relations as that she is unmarried. (And just to get this old chestnut out of the way, yes, Chinese eat dogs, and cats too. But we eat fewer and fewer of them every year.)

Tsai’s status as a single woman has been the subject of psycho-political analysis by Wang Weixing, the director of foreign studies at the People Liberation Army’s Academy of Military Science.

“As a single woman politician, she does not have the emotional burden of love, of ‘family’, of children. Tsai’s political style and executive strategy tends to be emotional, personal and extreme,” wrote Wang, who is also a member of Beijing’s Association of Relations across the Taiwan Straits.

I don’t have Wang’s expertise. But I have always owned cats and dogs. Recent studies have found differences between cat and dog lovers in all the “big five” personality traits: extraversion, neuroticism, agreeableness, conscientiousness and openness. A survey of 4,565 people by psychologists at the University of Texas in Austin finds that dog people are 15 per cent more extroverted, 13 per cent more agreeable and 11 per cent more conscientious than cat people. They prefer discipline, planning and control over being spontaneous.

Cat lovers are 12 per cent more neurotic but are 11 per cent more open, a trait that involves greater appreciation for art, emotion, adventure, unusual ideas, imagination, curiosity and new experiences. Dog people tend to be more conventional and traditional.

Another study from two Australian universities finds dog people are more socially dominant and competitive, and prefer their pets to be loyal and obedient.

Sound a bit like the difference between democratic Taiwan and the authoritarian mainland? Now Tsai is breaking her feline-loving mould by adopting three dogs. Taiwanese media have speculated an impending “civil war” with her two beloved cats, Xiang Xiang and Ah Tsai.

But it sounds like Taiwan’s most famous cat lover is reaching out to dogs. That’s surely a good sign for cross-strait relations.


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Post time 28-5-2016 10:34 AM | Show all posts

kena kesah.

Taiwan memang asal Nusantara kita

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Post time 28-5-2016 10:35 AM | Show all posts
80% bangsa Taiwan ada DNA Austronesia


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Post time 28-5-2016 10:48 AM | Show all posts
Taiwan nie suka jugak nak tarik2 tali. Just be firm lah. Nak masuk China atau independent. Itu jah.
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 Author| Post time 28-5-2016 10:54 AM | Show all posts
Muntz replied at 28-5-2016 10:48 AM
Taiwan nie suka jugak nak tarik2 tali. Just be firm lah. Nak masuk China atau independent. Itu jah.  ...

Dalam keadaan terkini ekonomi Taiwan yang dah slow gilerr dekat2(lebih rendah sikit) dah projected growth nyerrr macam Singapore, mungkin Taiwan kena kow-tow sikit dengan China, tak der pilihan lain, nak join TPPA pun tak dapat sebab belum diiktiraf sebagai sebuah negara di mata UN.
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Post time 28-5-2016 12:31 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
sejahtera replied at 28-5-2016 02:34 AM
kena kesah.

Taiwan memang asal Nusantara kita

Hauk dekkk....kakak syak tanah besar pun klaim kenusantaraan giteww?
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Post time 28-5-2016 02:00 PM | Show all posts

kau kesah.
Pasal tu kau klik button reply, untuk reply.
Yg tak kesah, dia tak reply apa pun. Pasl dia tak kesah.
Tapi kenapa kau kesah?
Hati kecil asal leluhur, kuat minta untuk reply sesuatu, walaupn skdr untuk denial.

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