
Taiwan VP says not intimidated after alleged China plot
TAIPEI: (Web Desk) 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 surveilled and followed in a ploy to be rammed 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.
Czech military intelligence spokesman Jan Pejsek told AFP on Sunday that Hsiao was targeted by “persons legalised in diplomatic positions at the Chinese Embassy in Prague”.
He said they tailed her and sought information about Hsiao’s programme and meetings with Czech officials.
“We even recorded attempts by the Chinese civil secret service to create conditions for a demonstrative kinetic action against a protected person, which, however, did not go beyond the preparatory stage,” Pejsek added.
Hsiao, who was vice president-elect at the time of the trip, posted on social media on Saturday, that she “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,” she said.
“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.