logo
Taiwan VP Hsiao Bi-khim says she won't be silenced after China allegedly ‘planned car crash' during 2024 Prague visit

Taiwan VP Hsiao Bi-khim says she won't be silenced after China allegedly ‘planned car crash' during 2024 Prague visit

Malay Mail11 hours ago

TAIPEI, June 29 — Taiwan's Vice-President Hsiao Bi-khim said she will not be intimidated by China after Czech military intelligence said Chinese diplomats and secret service followed Hsiao and planned to intimidate her physically when she visited Prague last year.
Hsiao visited the Czech Republic in March 2024. Prague does not have official diplomatic ties with Taiwan but has fostered warm relations with the democratically-governed island, which China views as its own territory despite Taiwan's rejection.
Czech media reported last year that a Chinese diplomat had run a red light when following her car. Czech public radio news website irozhlas.cz said on Thursday that the Chinese had also planned to stage a demonstrative car crash.
'I had a great visit to Prague & thank the Czech authorities for their hospitality & ensuring my safety. The CCP's unlawful activities will NOT intimidate me from voicing Taiwan's interests in the international community,' Hsiao wrote in a post on X social media platform yesterday, referring to the Chinese Communist Party. Her post was linked to the Reuters report on the incident.
In a separate post on X, Hsiao thanked global parliamentarians who have expressed solidarity against 'violence and coercion.'
'Taiwan will not be isolated by intimidation,' Hsiao wrote.
Czech Military Intelligence spokesman said Chinese diplomats in Prague had taken actions that violated diplomatic rules.
'This consisted of physically following the vice-president, gathering information on her schedule and attempts to document her meetings with important representatives of the Czech political and public scene,' spokesman Jan Pejsek said in emailed comments to Reuters.
'We even recorded an attempt by the Chinese civil secret service to create conditions to perform a demonstrative kinetic action against a protected person, which however did not go beyond the phase of preparation.'
A spokesperson for China's foreign ministry, commenting on the matter, denied any wrongdoing by Chinese diplomats and also said the Czech Republic had interfered in China's internal affairs by allowing Hsiao's visit to go ahead.
The Czech Foreign Ministry said it had summoned the Chinese ambassador over the incident at the time but did not comment further on Friday.
'This is the CCP's criminality on display for the whole world to see. This isn't diplomacy, it's coercion,' the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee wrote on X.
Taiwan protests
Taiwan's China-policy making Mainland Affairs Council said the Chinese actions 'seriously threatened the personal safety of Vice President Hsiao and her entourage'.
'The Mainland Affairs Council today protested and strongly condemned the Chinese communist's bad behaviour and demanded that the Chinese side should immediately explain and publicly apologise,' it said.
A senior Taiwan security official briefed on the matter told Reuters the incident was an example of 'transnational repression' by China that the European Union is currently paying close attention to.
'This is a problem that everyone should pay attention to,' the official requesting anonymity said, adding many government officials around the world were threatened by China upon visits made by Taiwanese officials or politicians to their countries.
In Beijing, foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said: 'Chinese diplomats have always abided by the laws and regulations of the countries in which they are stationed.'
'China urges the parties concerned not to be provoked and exploited by separatist forces for Taiwan independence, and to not make a fuss over nothing, engage in malicious speculation, and interfere with and undermine the relations between the two countries.'
Hsiao assumed office, along with President Lai Ching-te, on May 20 last year.
Czech relations with China have cooled in recent years. The Czechs accused China in May of being behind a cyberattack on the foreign ministry.
Czech politicians have visited Taiwan and former Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen visited Prague last October.
China views separately governed Taiwan as its own territory and has ramped up its military and political pressure in recent years. Taiwan says only its people can decide their future and vows to defend its freedom and democracy. — Reuters

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UN agency pushes AI ethics standards as US-China tech rivalry deepens
UN agency pushes AI ethics standards as US-China tech rivalry deepens

The Star

time43 minutes ago

  • The Star

UN agency pushes AI ethics standards as US-China tech rivalry deepens

A United Nations agency is rallying policymakers, non-government organisations and academics to support its ethics guidelines on artificial intelligence (AI) at a time when the technology is rapidly changing the world. Unesco, the 194-member UN heritage agency that produced the world's first – and so far only – global AI ethics standards four years ago, hosted a forum in Bangkok this week to drive the adoption of its recommendations. However, there is a long way to go before the recommendations could be turned into a universal, actionable framework amid an intensifying AI race between the US and China, according to analysts. At the opening on Wednesday of the third Unesco Global Forum on the Ethics of AI, Unesco director general Audrey Azoulay called for collaboration among governments, businesses and civil society to come up with an international solution. 'That is what Unesco is working to provide – preparing the world for AI and preparing AI for the world, ensuring it serves the common good,' she said. The message comes as hopes are dimming for a global consensus on AI ethics. A bipartisan group of US lawmakers introduced a bill in both chambers of Congress to ban the federal use of China-linked AI tools such as DeepSeek, in the latest sign of hostility in the tech rivalry between the world's two largest economies. Meanwhile, the world's largest AI companies, from US-based OpenAI and Google to China's DeepSeek, were absent from the forum, which attracted more than 1,000 participants and 35 government ministers, mainly from Asia-Pacific, Africa and Latin America. When asked how other countries would respond to the divisions in the AI world, Wisit Wisitsora-At, Permanent Secretary at the Thai Ministry of Digital Economy and Society, said Thailand would not take sides in the US-China competition, adding that it would try to develop its own AI ecosystem. Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra, who is facing political pressure at home over a leaked phone call with Cambodian strongman Hun Sen, delivered a speech in English, listing her country's AI development goals, including 90,000 AI professionals and over US$15 billion in spending for AI infrastructure. With the noticeable absence of American and Chinese government delegations at the three-day event – even though the US rejoined the group in 2023 after its withdrawal during the first Trump administration – the forum provided a stage for policymakers from the Asean region and 'global south' countries, from Malaysia and Indonesia to Zambia and Zimbabwe, to voice their ambitions, concerns and priorities in coping with AI. Irakli Khodeli, the head of ethics at Unesco's AI unit, said in an interview on Thursday that different countries had their own priorities for now, with some highlighting 'security' while others were aiming for 'access to AI'. A key aim of the gathering was to discuss the 'readiness assessment methodology', a tool to turn the UN body's AI ethics recommendations into policy actions. The assessment includes a questionnaire for governments, asking questions such as, 'Is there a specific consideration for the impact of AI on land and water use?'. More than 70 countries have taken part in the methodology. 'It is not a talk shop, it is a workshop for members to exchange notes,' Khodeli said of the event. At the gathering, some participants publicly outlined the challenges faced in applying ethics guardrails to AI development. Rachel Adams, founding CEO of the Global Centre on AI Governance, a non-profit organisation in South Africa, and author of The New Empire of AI: The Future of Global Inequality , said many civil society groups were having funding problems since US President Donald Trump shut down the United States Agency for International Development. During a panel discussion at the event, Zeng Yi, dean of the Beijing Institute of AI Safety and Governance and a professor with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said it was not difficult for countries to agree on terminologies such as transparency, but it was much harder to translate them into actual measures on the ground. Unesco sponsored the South China Morning Post's trip to the Bangkok event. - SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

Taiwan VP unshaken after alleged China plot in Prague
Taiwan VP unshaken after alleged China plot in Prague

New Straits Times

time5 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Taiwan VP unshaken after alleged China plot in Prague

TAIPEI: Taiwan's vice president said she would not be intimidated by Beijing after the government accused Chinese embassy staff of planning to ram her car during an official visit to Europe. Taiwan's top China policy body, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC), on Friday said Hsiao Bi-khim's motorcade was followed, surveilled and nearly hit by a car during a visit to the Czech Republic in March 2024. Citing a Czech intelligence agency report, the council said staff from the Chinese Embassy in Prague were behind the incident. "I had a great visit to Prague & thank the Czech authorities for their hospitality & ensuring my safety," Hsiao, who was vice president-elect at the time of the trip, posted on social media on Saturday. "The CCP's unlawful activities will NOT intimidate me from voicing Taiwan's interests in the international community." "Taiwan will not be isolated by intimidation," she added. Like most countries, Prague does not have official diplomatic relations with Taipei. China claims Taiwan as its territory and in recent years, has ramped up the deployment of fighter jets and warships around the self-ruled island. It has also sought to erase Taiwan from the international stage by poaching its diplomatic allies and blocking it from global forums. Taipei said on Friday that "the Chinese Embassy in the Czech Republic followed, conducted surveillance on, and even attempted to ram the motorcade, seriously threatening the personal safety of Vice President Hsiao and her entourage." It added the incident exposed CCP's "violent nature" and lack of "sincerity" in communication. A Taiwan security official, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, said it was a "typical case" of China's "transnational repression" against dissidents or those who criticise China. "China uses legal grey areas to harass, threaten or oppress their targets," the official said. The Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC), an international group that has challenged Beijing's human rights record, said in a statement signed by 51 lawmakers from nearly 30 countries that it supported Hsiao and "Taiwanese citizens who may be subject to coercion by the Chinese state while travelling abroad." China's foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said Friday that Prague had violated the "One-China principle" and its political commitments to China by allowing Hsaio, who it called a diehard "Taiwan independence" activist, to visit. "Chinese diplomats always abide by the laws and regulations of host countries," he said. He urged other countries not to be exploited by "Taiwan independence" separatists to "stir up troubles" and undermine the relations with China.--AFP

Taiwan VP says not intimidated after alleged China plot
Taiwan VP says not intimidated after alleged China plot

The Sun

time5 hours ago

  • The Sun

Taiwan VP says not intimidated after alleged China plot

TAIPEI: Taiwan's vice president said she would not be intimidated by Beijing after the government accused Chinese embassy staff of planning to ram her car during an official visit to Europe. Taiwan's top China policy body, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC), on Friday said Hsiao Bi-khim's motorcade was followed, surveilled and nearly hit by a car during a visit to the Czech Republic in March 2024. Citing a Czech intelligence agency report, the council said staff from the Chinese Embassy in Prague were behind the incident. 'I had a great visit to Prague & thank the Czech authorities for their hospitality & ensuring my safety,' Hsiao, who was vice president-elect at the time of the trip, posted on social media on Saturday. 'The CCP's unlawful activities will NOT intimidate me from voicing Taiwan's interests in the international community.' 'Taiwan will not be isolated by intimidation,' she added. Like most countries, Prague does not have official diplomatic relations with Taipei. China claims Taiwan as its territory and in recent years, has ramped up the deployment of fighter jets and warships around the self-ruled island. It has also sought to erase Taiwan from the international stage by poaching its diplomatic allies and blocking it from global forums. Taipei said on Friday that 'the Chinese Embassy in the Czech Republic followed, conducted surveillance on, and even attempted to ram the motorcade, seriously threatening the personal safety of Vice President Hsiao and her entourage'. It added the incident exposed CCP's 'violent nature' and lack of 'sincerity' in communication. A Taiwan security official, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, said it was a 'typical case' of China's 'transnational repression' against dissidents or those who criticise China. 'China uses legal grey areas to harass, threaten or oppress their targets,' the official said. The Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC), an international group that has challenged Beijing's human rights record, said in a statement signed by 51 lawmakers from nearly 30 countries that it supported Hsiao and 'Taiwanese citizens who may be subject to coercion by the Chinese state while travelling abroad'. China's foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said Friday that Prague had violated the 'One-China principle' and its political commitments to China by allowing Hsaio, who it called a diehard 'Taiwan independence' activist, to visit. 'Chinese diplomats always abide by the laws and regulations of host countries,' he said. He urged other countries not to be exploited by 'Taiwan independence' separatists to 'stir up troubles' and undermine the relations with China.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store