As China clamps down on Hong Kong – Is Taiwan next?

Jul 8, 2020

2 min

Elizabeth Larus


As protests erupt again across Hong Kong against the recent imposing of new security laws essentially giving Beijing unprecedented powers  – it has some worried about what is next as China pursues it’s One-China policy.


In Taiwan people are watching, and concern is growing. 


Professor Elizabeth Freund Larus teaches political science at the University of Mary Washington and is an #expert on China and the field of Asian studies. She has also been interviewed by media such as CNBC, The Diplomat and CBN News regarding this topic.


She has noted that the developments in China, especially with regards to Hong Kong and Taiwan are catching global attention and will impact economies and governments across the globe. 


Beijing has taken an especially hard line towards Taiwan since the 2016 election of President Tsai Ing-wen of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), ramping up military, economic and diplomatic pressure.


Tsai views Taiwan as a de facto independent nation and not part of "one China".


But the pressure campaign has done little to endear China to Taiwan's 23 million people.


In January, Tsai won a second term with a historic landslide and polls consistently show a growing distrust of China...


Social media is filled with messages of support for Hong Kong's democracy movement. Some back Taiwanese independence, or highlight China's rights abuses in regions such as Tibet and Xinjiang.


Wendy Peng, a 26-year-old magazine editor who said she often shared pro-Hong Kong democracy messages on social media, said she would now avoid visiting the city.


"The national security law makes me wonder how far would China go. Right now I don't see a bottom line and there's probably none. I think it's possible they will target Taiwan next," she said.  July -7 Yahoo! New/AFP

 



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Elizabeth Larus is available to speak to mediasimply click on her icon to arrange an interview.

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Elizabeth Larus

Elizabeth Larus

Professor, Political Science

Dr. Larus is an expert in the politics of China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong

Political ScienceUniversity TeachingPublic PolicyInternational RelationsForeign Policy

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