Re: Fwd: Ka-na-tai po-choa e sia-lun
ApiN-a "chitpeng chitkok" tisu hiantiuN lok-im chiuN bang a.
[http://www.taiwanesevoice.net](<http://www.taiwanesevoice.net/>)
Tan ChuipiN chongthong tisu
<http://voiceoftaiwan.streamguys.com/__events/events_20020803.m3u>
Li Tenghui cheng-chongthong tisu
<http://voiceoftaiwan.streamguys.com/__events/events_20020802.m3u>
So*, cheng-hian ss siaN:
>Taigu-bang e hiaN-che :
>
>Teng 1-tiuN phoe e bang-chi in-ui siuN-tng kho-leng u sio-khoa bun-te.
>
>Goa tit-chiap ka National Post e sia-lun "Stand up for Taiwan" copy tiam
>e-kha hou tai-ke chham-kho.
>
>peng-an,
>Cheng-hian
>
>____________________________________________________________________
>
>Stand up for Taiwan
>
>
>National Post
>
>
>Friday, August 09, 2002
>
>
>The on-again/off-again war of words between mainland China and the island
>nation of Taiwan seems to be entering an on phase. Beijing insists that
>Taiwan, which has run its own independent government since 1949, must
>eventually return to mainland control -- on threat of force if necessary.
>To impress this point on the Taiwanese, the China Daily, a Chinese
>government-run publication, bluntly warned Taipei on Wednesday that "Taiwan
>choosing independence is tantamount to choosing war." The Daily also quoted
>a military official as saying that "If [China] wants to strive for peace,
>we have to be fully prepared for military action [against Taiwan]." How do
>Taiwan's 20 million people threaten the peaceful existence of the People's
>Republic's 1.3 billion? He didn't say.
>
>The Chinese are incensed by a speech delivered last Saturday by Chen
>Shui-bian, Taiwan's President. "With Taiwan and China on each side of the
>[Taiwan] strait, each side is a country," Mr. Chen said. "This needs to be
>clear ... Our Taiwan is not something that belongs to someone else. Our
>Taiwan is not someone else's local government." A special irritant to the
>mainland was Mr. Chen's further comment that "our Taiwan is not someone
>else's province," an explicit rejection of Beijing's take on the island's
>status.
>
>Taiwan is a free-market democracy bristling with well-educated
>entrepreneurs and advanced technology. It is a model not only for China's
>creaking, repressive Communist government, but for other states in Africa
>and Asia aiming to modernize. And yet Taiwan is friendless. Hardly anyone
>recognizes it as a country, to avoid offending Beijing. Fearful of
>endangering their trade with the mainland, the West's wealthy democracies
>often look away when Communist China menaces Taiwan.
>
>As the West's natural ally, Taiwan deserves our support in the face of
>Beijing's threats. The United States has done its part: Earlier this year,
>U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said the Bush administration
>will do "whatever it takes" to defend Taiwan from military strikes by
>China. Other Western nations, including Canada, should support Taiwan
>through diplomatic channels. It must be made clear to Beijing that its
>dubious revanchism cannot justify threats of violence against a peaceful,
>effectively independent, neighbour.
>
>c Copyright 2002 National Post
>
>
>>Date: Sat, 10 Aug 2002 23:23:56 -0400
>>To:
>>From: "So*, cheng-hian"
>>Subject: Ka-na-tai po-choa e sia-lun
>>
>>Tai-gu bang e hiaN-che :
>>
>>Ka-na-tai e po-choa National Post ti pai-5 hoat-piau sia-lun chi-chhi Taioan.
>>
>>ChhiaN jip-khi e-bin e bang-cham chham-koan :
>>
>><http://nationalpost.com/search/site/story.asp?id=B9027AD8-1841-4EB2-A4BF-C0>
>>8E98C8683E
>>
>>peng-an,
>>Cheng-hian
>
>
>* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
>* Li chu-chheh e e-mail khau-cho si: "So*, cheng-hian" .
>* Beh kia phoe ho' tak-ke tioh iong chit-e khau-cho chiah kia-e-kau.
>* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
>
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* Li chu-chheh e e-mail khau-cho si: TADA Kei .
* Beh kia phoe ho' tak-ke tioh iong chit-e khau-cho chiah kia-e-kau.
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