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Mainland issues warning amid protests in Taiwan
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2004-03-27
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BEIJING, March 26 (Xinhuanet) -- The mainland side
will not look on indifferently if the current situation in
Taiwan worsens and spirals out of control, a spokesman for
the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council said Friday.
The strong-worded
statement came as thousands of angry Taiwanese protesters
besieged the headquarters of the election commission of
Taiwan and scuffled with police seven times on Friday
afternoon.
Some
protesters stormed into the headquarters to prevent the
election commission from posting a notice on a bulletin
board at the headquarters declaring the winner of the
disputed March 20 election of the Taiwan region.
Chen Shui-bian
reportedly won only 29,000 more votes than the opposition
coalition, while rejected votes totaled 330,000. Opposition
leaders have said the election is unfair due to vote
irregularities and the suspicious shooting incident on March
19, in which Chen and his running mate were wounded. They
also demanded a recount of the vote and election results be
nullified.
The
commission managed to post the notice at 19:40 Friday thanks
to the intervention of police.
"Taiwan compatriots are as close to us as
flesh and blood," said the spokesman. "We will not
sit back and look on unconcerned should the post-election
situation in Taiwan get out of control, leading to social
turmoil, endangering the lives and property of Taiwan
compatriots and affecting stability across the Taiwan
Straits."
"We
have noticed that the electoral institution of the Taiwan
region has announced the (March 20) election results in
disregard of strong opposition from one competing
side," the spokesman said.
"We have also noticed that the opposition
side refused to accept the results and that they are
continuing their protests."
"We are closely following the developments in
Taiwan," the spokesman said.
The major opposition party, Kuomintang, is
reportedly scheduled to hold a large rally in protest in
Taipei Saturday. Enditem
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