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Taiwan to change passport, fed up with confusion with China

Published 09/02/2020, 12:51 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 05:46 AM
© Reuters. New Taiwan passport is displayed in Taipei

TAIPEI (Reuters) - Fed up with being confused for China amid the coronavirus pandemic and Beijing's stepped-up efforts to assert sovereignty, Taiwan said on Wednesday it would redesign its passport to give greater prominence to the island's name.

Taiwan has complained during the outbreak that its nationals have encountered problems entering other countries, as Taiwanese passports have the words "Republic of China", its formal name, written in large English font at the top, with "Taiwan" printed at the bottom.

The new passport, to roll out in January, enlarges the word "Taiwan" in English and removes the large English words "Republic of China", though that name in Chinese and in small English font around the national emblem will remain.

Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said new passports were needed to prevent their nationals being mistaken for Chinese citizens, especially with the stepped up entry checks many countries have begun since the pandemic began.

"Since the beginning of the Wuhan pneumonia outbreak this year our people have kept hoping that we can give more prominence to Taiwan's visibility, avoiding people mistakenly thinking they are from China," Wu told reporters.

In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said it did not matter what "petty moves" Taiwan made, it could not change the fact that Taiwan was an inseparable part of China.

China claims democratic Taiwan as its sovereign territory, and says only it has the right to speak for the island internationally, a position it has pushed strongly during the pandemic, especially at the World Health Organization.

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Taipei says this has confused countries and led them to impose the same restrictions on Taiwanese travellers as on Chinese, and that Taiwan has never been run by the People's Republic of China.

Taiwan has been debating its identity for years, including its name. But the pandemic has shot the issue back into the spotlight.

The government is also considering a name change - or at least a full redesign - for Taiwan's largest carrier, China Airlines (TW:2610), again to avoid confusion with China.

Latest comments

Nobody really care except themselves and they thought others can tell the so called difference...
Strange comment - so if I accept what little logic i can find here, i would conclude the CCP and its puppets would not even notice the 'so called  difference'. We shall see  As for the notion that no one really cares? mmmm - did you just insult the CCP??
Taiwan was inhabited by native Taiwanese. The Portuguese discovered the island. The island belong to the native taiwanese not chinese.
If they speak Chinese, read and writes chinese, looks chinese, have same ancestors, same customs, they are from China. Therefore Taiwan will always be a province 9f China.
@Kaveh Sun, you have no idea about Taiwan and its history. Taiwanese speak mandarin, write traditional Chinese. Even their local language is a kind of Chinese dialect: Southern Fujian Dialect.
  - I think the citizens of democratic Taiwan, some of whom are Chinese decedents, have chosen a different path as expressed in their last national democratic election. I think this should be obvious to most, setting aside those few who feel they have a right to impose their own brand of fearful pride as a tyranny on an entire democratic population. Is this where your name resides David9??
that is great
They need to put on the passport, Taiwan, A Province of China. That's it.
Gee - thats it?? wow - So simple :)) David - please go to the UN and preach your wisdom..
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