Beijing has pressured foreign governments to deport hundreds of Taiwan nationals to China, a new report found, in what human rights activists describe as a “hunt for Taiwanese”.
More than 600 Taiwanese were extradited from various countries to China between 2016 and 2019 in an effort to “undermine Taiwanese sovereignty”, rights group Safeguard Defenders said in a report on Nov. 30.
China claims self-ruled democratic Taiwan as its territory, to be retaken one day by force if necessary, and has stepped up efforts in recent years to diplomatically isolate it.
China and Taiwan agreed in 2009 that police from both sides would return overseas suspects to their respective territories.
But Beijing began to increasingly ignore this agreement after the election of Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen in 2016, according to the NGO’s report.
As Tsai has tried to assert the island’s distinct identity, China has more aggressively professed its claim over Taiwan.
Spain accounted for the greatest number of known forced transfer cases — more than 200 — despite being bound by the European Convention on Human Rights
Safeguard Defenders said Beijing had pressured governments — including the Philippines and Cambodia — to extradite hundreds of Taiwanese mostly accused of telecoms fraud to China, despite efforts by the Taiwan government and the UN Human Rights Council to prevent the forced transfers.
Those extradited to China faced “arbitrary detention, torture, enforced disappearances, and forced televised confessions”, Safeguard Defenders said.
Spain accounted for the greatest number of known forced transfer cases — more than 200 — despite being bound by the European Convention on Human Rights, according to the report.
A Spanish court ruled in 2017 that a group of 121 Chinese and Taiwanese fraud suspects could be extradited to China, pointing to Beijing’s widely followed “One-China policy” — in which Taiwan is diplomatically considered a part of China.
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The Spanish government has shown a “clear disregard” for its human rights commitments and a “lack of understanding of the severity of human rights abuses in China”, Safeguard Defenders said.
In a contrasting European ruling, last year the Czech Supreme Court rejected China’s extradition request for eight Taiwan nationals, citing the risk of torture and Beijing’s poor rights record.
In response to the report, Taiwan’s government said Wednesday that China “does not have jurisdiction” over Taiwanese citizens implicated in criminal cases abroad, who it said should be returned to Taiwan to face trial.
The Mainland Affairs Council, Taiwan’s top China policy-making body, said Beijing aims to “show its sovereignty over Taiwan” by pushing for the deportations.
“We again urge the Chinese side that crime-fighting should not involve politics and we hope law enforcement units on both sides can continue to cooperate on existing basis to effectively fight crimes and protest public welfare,” it said in a statement.
Madrid-based Safeguard Defenders is an organisation that monitors and supports human rights activists in Asia.
Co-founder Peter Dahlin was deported from China in 2016 after being detained for 23 days and forced to make a televised confession.
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