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Peng Ming-min, Fighter for Democracy in Taiwan, Dies at 98

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Peng Ming-min, Fighter for Democracy in Taiwan, Dies at 98

By that point Mr. Peng had been blacklisted from returning to Taiwan, after a navy courtroom in 1964 convicted him of sedition over his involvement with two of his college students within the printing of a manifesto calling for the overthrow of the Republic of China authorities and the institution of a Taiwanese democracy. American strain on Chiang Kai-shek to launch Mr. Peng had led to his switch from an eight-year jail sentence to accommodate arrest in 1965. With assist from Amnesty Worldwide, he escaped in 1970, fleeing to Sweden.

America was the subsequent cease for Mr. Peng, who took up a professorship on the College of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Whereas there, he wrote what would show to be an influential autobiography, “A Style of Freedom” (1972). In 1981, he co-founded the Formosan Affiliation for Public Affairs, a lobbying group that is still lively immediately. (Formosa is one other identify traditionally used for Taiwan.)

In November 1992, following the top of 38 years of martial legislation in Taiwan and the loss of life of Chiang’s son and successor, Chiang Ching-kuo, Mr. Peng returned to Taiwan, the place he was welcomed at Chiang Kai-shek Worldwide Airport by a crowd of about 1,000. He joined the Democratic Progressive Get together two years later, earlier than his failed presidential bid.

Within the 2000 election, Taiwan selected the Democratic Progressive candidate Chen Shui-bian as president. He was the nation’s first president who was not a member of the Kuomintang. Mr. Chen made Mr. Peng an adviser in acknowledgment of his contributions to Taiwan’s democratic wrestle.

A long time earlier, as frosty relations between Washington and Beijing started to thaw beneath the Nixon administration, Mr. Peng had urged the world to concentrate to the considerations of the Taiwanese folks.

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In a 1971 opinion essay in The New York Instances, he refuted China’s declare on Taiwan whereas arguing for nearer ties throughout the Taiwan Strait between Beijing and Taipei.

“The Chinese language,” he wrote, “should be taught to tell apart ethnic origin and tradition from politics and legislation, and to discard their archaic obsession to assert anybody of Chinese language ancestry as legally Chinese language, nonetheless far faraway from China.”

He continued: “The true challenge is just not independence for Formosa however self-determination for the folks there. And the Formosan folks need to stay in essentially the most pleasant affiliation with the Chinese language folks and would spare no effort to ascertain the closest financial, business and even political ties with China.”

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Top Israeli security delegation in Doha for Gaza talks

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Top Israeli security delegation in Doha for Gaza talks
A top level Israeli security delegation arrived in Qatar on Sunday for talks on a Gaza hostage and ceasefire deal, a spokesperson for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, in a possible sign of so-far elusive agreements nearing.
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China reportedly building 'D-Day'-style barges as fears of Taiwan invasion rise

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China reportedly building 'D-Day'-style barges as fears of Taiwan invasion rise

China is reportedly building a series of “D-Day style” barges that could be used to aid an invasion of Taiwan, according to media reports. 

At least three of the new craft have been observed at Guangzhou Shipyard in southern China, according to Naval News.

The barges are inspired by the World War II “Mulberry harbours,” which were portable harbors built for the Allied campaign in Normandy, France, in 1944, The Telegraph reported.

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Tensions between both nations have heightened in recent years. A series of barges was reportedly seen in China, sparking fears of an invasion of Taiwan. (Getty Images)

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Tensions between China and Taiwan, a key U.S. partner in the Indo-Pacific region, have remained heightened over Beijing’s refusal to recognize the independence of the island nation. 

In its report last week, Naval News said at least three but likely five or more barges were seen in China’s Guangzhou Shipyard. The barges, at over 390 feet, can be used to reach a coastal road or hard surface beyond a beach, the report said. 

In his New Year’s message, Chinese leader Xi Jinping said “reunification” with Taiwan is inevitable.

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Taiwan President Lai meets David Trulio, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute in Taipei.

Taiwan President Lai Ching-te and David Trulio, president and CEO of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute, meet in Taipei. (Official Photo by Chen Lin/Office of the President/File)

“The people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait are one family. No one can sever our family bonds, and no one can stop the historical trend of national reunification,” he said on CCTV, China’s state broadcaster.

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Using barges, Chinese forces could land in areas previously considered unsuitable, including rocky or soft terrain, and beaches where tanks and other heavy equipment can be delivered to firmer ground or a coastal road, the report said. 

“Any invasion of Taiwan from the mainland would require a large number of ships to transport personnel and equipment across the strait quickly, particularly land assets like armored vehicles,” Emma Salisbury, a sea power research fellow at the Council on Geostrategy, told Naval News. “As preparation for an invasion, or at least to give China the option as leverage, I would expect to see a build-up of construction of ships that could accomplish this transportation.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to the Department of Defense, the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office, also in Washington.

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Hunter Biden prosecutor chastises president for maligning justice system

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Hunter Biden prosecutor chastises president for maligning justice system

Special Counsel David Weiss says president’s claims that his son was selectively prosecuted undermine rule of law.

The special counsel who indicted United States President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden has accused the outgoing president of undermining the justice system by claiming the prosecution was selective and unfair.

In his final report on the case released on Monday, Special Counsel David Weiss said the president’s claim that his son had been singled out for prosecution was “gratuitous and wrong”.

“Other presidents have pardoned family members, but in doing so, none have taken the occasion as an opportunity to malign the public servants at the Department of Justice based solely on false accusations,” Weiss said in the 280-page report.

Weiss, who was appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland to investigate the younger Biden, said the decisions to prosecute the president’s son were the result of impartial investigations and calling them into question undermined the “very foundation of what makes America’s justice system fair and equitable”.

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“It erodes public confidence in an institution that is essential to preserving the rule of law,” Weiss said.

Weiss said that the prosecutions, far from being selective, were the “embodiment of the equal application of justice — no matter who you are, or what your last name is, you are subject to the same laws as everyone else in the United States”.

Under Justice Department regulations, special counsels submit a final report at the end of their probe.

The elder Biden issued a pardon for his son for firearms and tax convictions last month after previously pledging not to use his presidential authority to intervene.

The president said that any reasonable person looking at the facts of the cases would conclude that his son had been “selectively, and unfairly” prosecuted due to his family name.

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“There has been an effort to break Hunter – who has been five and a half years sober, even in the face of unrelenting attacks and selective prosecution,” Biden said at the time.

Hunter Biden was in June found guilty of gun charges related to lying about his drug use on a background check form. In September, Biden pleaded guilty to evading $1.4m in taxes in a separate case.

He had been awaiting sentencing in the two cases when his father announced the pardon.

Hunter Biden’s lawyer criticised Weiss’s report, saying the special counsel had failed to explain why prosecutors “pursued wild — and debunked – conspiracies” about the president’s son.

“What is clear from this report is that the investigation into Hunter Biden is a cautionary tale of the abuse of prosecutorial power,” Abbe Lowell said in a statement.

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