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Taiwan protesters meet China’s intimidation with defiance

Friday is the second day of Chinese military drills to the north, south, and east of Taiwan. China’s message: The People’s Liberation Army can conduct “political strikes” against Taiwan independence strongholds, while also blockading the island and choking off its exports, energy imports, and navy. 

China considers Taiwan a renegade province and has vowed to bring the self-governing democratic island of 24 million people under Beijing’s control, by force, if necessary.

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After Taiwan recently elected a pro-independence president, China launched aggressive military exercises. Now, pro-democracy protesters in Taiwan are responding with their own show of force.

But the mass protests that erupted Friday were a different kind of political strike – one of defiance against the missiles and rhetoric pointed at the island. Taiwan’s new president, Lai Ching-te, who was sworn in Monday, has pledged to “neither yield nor provoke” China’s leaders. 

The protesters stood with him, and against all efforts – within Taiwan and without – to undermine the island’s autonomy. “China has been threatening us for decades,” says one protester. “Of course I worry, but worry can’t save us. We need to learn to save ourselves.”

Mass protests erupted in Taiwan Friday in defiance of military and political pressure from Beijing, as China waged a large-scale military exercise aimed at testing its ability to forcibly control the island.

Tens of thousands of Taiwanese poured into the streets of Taipei on Friday chanting slogans against what protesters called anti-democratic, China-backed legislative reforms by the island’s Beijing-leaning political party.

“China has been threatening us for decades,” says Jenny Yeh, a self-described housewife from Taipei. “Of course I worry, but worry can’t save us. We need to learn to save ourselves.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

After Taiwan recently elected a pro-independence president, China launched aggressive military exercises. Now, pro-democracy protesters in Taiwan are responding with their own show of force.

In a second day of “joint strike drills” targeting Taiwan, China on Friday dispatched scores of People’s Liberation Army (PLA) jets and bombers and more than a dozen naval and coast guard ships in what Beijing called a “warning” to the new administration of Taiwan President Lai Ching-te, who was sworn in Monday.

Beijing said the drills to the north, south, and east of Taiwan were aimed at demonstrating the PLA’s ability to conduct “political strikes” against Taiwan independence strongholds, while also blockading the island and choking off its exports, energy imports, and navy. 

The PLA also launched mock missile strikes on Taiwan, and some of its jets reportedly carried live missiles. Taiwan scrambled jets and placed its armed forces on alert in response to the PLA drills.

Tingshu Wang/Reuters

A person looks at a screen showing news footage of military drills conducted in areas around the island of Taiwan by the Eastern Theater Command of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, in Beijing, May 23, 2024.

China considers Taiwan a renegade province and has vowed to bring the self-governing democratic island of 24 million people under Beijing’s control, by force, if necessary.

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