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"Presidential Alert" On Phones Across Taiwan As China Launches Satellite

Taiwan issued a national emergency alert on Tuesday as China launched a satellite, days before the self-ruled island holds a crucial presidential election that has heightened security worries.

The alert came hours after election front-runner Lai Ching-te, Taiwan's current vice president, accused Beijing of using "all means" to influence this weekend's poll, which will set the course of cross-strait ties for the next four years.

Phones across Taiwan blared with a "presidential alert" at about 3:15 pm (0715 GMT), around the time Beijing announced the successful launch of its Einstein Probe satellite, which it says will gather astronomical data.

"China launched (a) satellite which flew over the southern airspace," said Taiwan's alert in Chinese, urging the public to stay safe.

The English part of the message described it as an "air raid alert" warning of a "missile flyover Taiwan airspace", but officials said this was a mistranslation.

The defence ministry later apologised for the mistake, saying the default message in English had not been updated.

Foreign Minister Joseph Wu was giving a news conference about the elections when the alert message buzzed on mobile phones, interrupting his address.

He explained that the alert was issued because of possible falling "debris".

"When a rocket is openly flying in our sky, some of their tubes or debris will fall in this region," Wu told reporters.

He said the launch was part of a pattern of "grey zone" activities by Beijing aimed at intimidating Taiwan.

"With this kind of threat against Taiwan, I think we should be clear-eyed, we should not be provoked," Wu said.

'No illusions' 

Earlier Lai warned voters to have no illusions about China maintaining peace but said that he would keep the door open for exchanges with Beijing if he takes power.

Saturday's election will be closely watched from Beijing to Washington as voters choose a new leader to steer the island in the face of an increasingly assertive Beijing.

China claims Taiwan as part of its territory, rejecting the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government's stance that the island is "already independent".

Beijing has maintained a near-daily military presence around Taiwan -- with four Chinese balloons moving across the sensitive median line on Monday, the latest in a series of incursions that Taiwan and conflict experts say is a form of "grey zone" harassment.

Lai said that while China interferes in "every election in Taiwan", the latest efforts are the "most serious".

"In addition to political and military intimidation, (it is using) economic means, cognitive warfare, disinformation, threats and incentives," he told reporters.

"It has resorted to all means to interfere with this election."

Hong Kong warning 

President Tsai Ing-wen, who is leaving office after reaching the two-term limit, won a landslide in the last election in 2020.

She was carried to victory by the Taiwan public's fears of becoming like Hong Kong, which had seen Beijing crackdown on dissent by implementing a national security law after city-wide protests for greater freedoms.

Under her administration, Beijing has refused all high-level communications with Tsai and ramped up political and military pressures against Taiwan.

Lai said Tuesday that "as long as there is parity and dignity, Taiwan's door will always be open" for exchanges and cooperation with China under his leadership.

"But we cannot have illusions about peace. Accepting China's 'one-China' principle is not true peace," he said, referring to a Beijing doctrine that Taiwan is a part of China.

"Peace without sovereignty is just like Hong Kong. It is a false peace."

Touting deterrence as a main defence policy, Lai said the DPP's "pursuit of peace relies on strength, not on the goodwill of the aggressor".

"The goodwill of invaders cannot be relied on -- if you look at Tibet and Xinjiang in the past, or Hong Kong today, these are all good examples," Lai said.

His opponents on Saturday include Hou Yu-ih, a former police chief and mayor of the Kuomintang (KMT), a party that has long encouraged closer cooperation with China.

Hou has said that Lai -- who has previously dubbed himself a "pragmatic worker for Taiwan's independence" -- represents a danger to cross-strait relations.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



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