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The Democratic Progressive Party’s (DPP) Lai Ching-te was sworn in as Taiwan’s new leader on Monday, after Beijing branded him a “dangerous separatist.” Lai faces a full inbox, with political gridlock at home, sabre-rattling from Beijing, and dwindling allies abroad. HKFP rounds up photography from the inauguration day in Taipei. In Lai’s first speech as the island’s president, delivered just after 11 am, Lai said Taiwan would continue to work with the world’s democracies to “combat disinformation, strengthen democratic resilience, address challenges and allow Taiwan to become the MVP [Most Va...
Hong Kong Free Press
Residents of Taipei largely went about their commutes as normal on Monday morning, aside from those who found their routes blocked by road closures around the Presidential Office Building, where the Democratic Progressive Party’s (DPP) Lai Ching-te was being sworn in as the island’s next leader. Chen Shih-eu, 32, however, was not heading to work. Instead, she was standing on the side of the road outside the nearby 228 Peace Memorial Park watching a livestream of Lai’s inauguration on her phone. “I think it’s a very important moment for Taiwanese, especially for our young generation,” she told ...
Hong Kong Free Press
Im angespannten Verhältnis zu China hat Taiwans neuer Präsident Lai Ching-te bei seiner Amtseinführung Peking zu einem Ende der Einschüchterungsversuche aufgefordert. «Ich möchte auch China aufrufen, seine politische und militärische Einschüchterung gegen Taiwan einzustellen», sagte der Politiker der Demokratischen Fortschrittspartei (DPP) während seiner Antrittsrede vor Tausenden Anhängern in Taipeh. China solle die Verantwortung mit Taiwan teilen, in der Meerenge zwischen den beiden Ländern (Taiwanstraße) und der Region Frieden und Stabilität aufrechtzuerhalten. Die Zukunft der Beziehungen i...
DPA (German)
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