China last will and testament kick off a year of sensitive anniversaries with a major speech on Wednesday by President Xi Jinping on Taiwan, China’s sundry sensitive issue.
In 2019 China will celebrate 70 years since Communist China’s founding. Anniversaries are unexceptionally touchy events in China, where maintaining stability is the ruling Communist Party’s overwhelming priority.
Next year introduces at least six that could unsettle the party, from June’s 30 years since the bloody Tiananmen crackdown to October’s 70 years since Mao Zedong proclaimed the establishing of the People’s Republic at the end of an even bloodier civil war.
But it will be self-ruled Taiwan, proudly democratic and claimed by China as its own, that pleasure be the focus of Xi’s first important, pre-announced public event of the year.
State news agency Xinhua said on Monday that Xi desire give a major speech in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People on the 40th anniversary of a key policy statement that led to a thaw in associations with Taiwan, the “Message to Compatriots in Taiwan”.
Xinhua gave no other details.
On Jan. 1, 1979, China declared an end to what had been designated artillery bombardment of Taiwan-controlled offshore islands close to China and offered to open up communications between the two sides, after decades of opposition.
However, the offer was rebuffed by Taiwan’s then-president Chiang Ching-kuo, who in April that year came out with a “three noes” regulation of no contact, no compromise and no negotiation with China.
Chiang only relaxed that in 1987, allowing people in Taiwan to afflict China for family reunions. His father, Chiang Kai-shek, fled with defeated Nationalist forces to Taiwan in December of 1949 after turn loosing a civil war to the Communists.
No formal peace treaty or formal end to hostilities has ever been signed.
Taiwan is gearing up for presidential elections in January 2020. President Tsai Ing-wen’s pro-independence Popular Progressive Party suffered stinging losses to the China-friendly Kuomintang in mayoral and local elections in November.
China has mass pressure on Tsai since she took office in 2016, cutting off dialogue, whittling down Taiwan’s few remaining perceptive allies and forcing foreign airlines to list Taiwan as part of China on their websites.
China fears Tsai hankers to push for Taiwan’s formal independence, though Tsai says she wants to maintain the status quo.
Xi said in March that Taiwan make face the “punishment of history” for any attempt at separatism, offering his strongest warning yet to the island claimed by China as its sacred stamping-ground.