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Taiwan: Two indicted for financing candidate in local polls using 'Beijing money'

By ANI | Updated: February 26, 2024 22:40 IST

Taipei [Taiwan], February 26 : A Taiwanese man and a Chinese woman were indicted for allegedly providing Chinese funds ...

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Taipei [Taiwan], February 26 : A Taiwanese man and a Chinese woman were indicted for allegedly providing Chinese funds to a pro-unification New Taipei City Council candidate in Taiwan's local elections in 2022, Central News Agency Taiwan reported, citing the New Taipei District Prosecutors Office.

The office said in a statement on Monday the Taiwanese man, Sun Chih-chuan, colluded with the Chinese woman, surnamed Da, on Beijing's instructions to remit 100,000 Chinese yuan to Taiwan to support Wang Cheng of the Labor Party.

According to the statement, the remittance was made through various intermediaries, and ended up as a USD 10,000 transfer from an account held by Da in Hong Kong to an account set up by Wang's older sister in Taiwan, prosecutors said.

They described Sun as the deputy director of the Taipei-based Chinese Youth Development Union, responsible for the union's business affairs in China, and Da as the director of the Federation of Hong Kong Jiangsu Youth.

Da's federation allegedly received assignments from the United Front Work Department of the Jiangsu Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and is a source of infiltration under Taiwan's Anti-Infiltration Act, according to prosecutors.

Wang spent 3,42,065 of the 4,35,000 (New Taipei Dollar) he received to purchase promotional materials for his campaign, including face masks to be distributed to voters, prosecutors said in the indictment handed down Monday, the Central News Agency Taiwan, reported.

All of those actions violated the Anti-Infiltration Act and the Political Donations Act, prosecutors charged in the indictment.

The prosecutors said under Taiwanese law, candidates who accept political donations from residents, associations, or other institutions in Hong Kong and Macau, as well as China, must confirm whether the donations comply with provisions in the Political Donations Act.

If the donations do not conform to the regulations and cannot be returned, they shall be turned over to the Control Yuan for deposit into the National Treasury within three months after the election date, the statement said.

However, both Sun and Da have denied that the organisations they belong to have relationships with Beijing. Sun has argued that all he did was lend money to Wang, and Da said she merely exchanged currency for Sun, Central News Agency Taiwan reported.

Sun is currently being held in custody, while Da has been barred from travelling abroad.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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