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Taiwan hosts international anti-Chinese Communist Party coalition conference

  • Beijing tried to ‘intimidate and dissuade’ some of the 48 Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China lawmakers from attending, IPAC says

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Dozens of lawmakers, drawn from a broad spectrum of the world’s political parties, will meet in Taipei this week for the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC) summit. Photo: IPAC
An international coalition advocating for a tougher stance on the Chinese Communist Party will open its annual conference in Taiwan on Tuesday, an event likely to provoke Beijing.
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Some 48 lawmakers from 24 countries across five continents arrived in Taipei on Sunday for the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC) conference, although Taiwan is not a member of the alliance.
According to IPAC, the meeting will focus on crafting a coordinated campaign aimed at maintaining cross-strait stability and peace for the legislators to promote in their home countries. Cybersecurity will also be a key topic of discussion.

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“It will be the largest parliamentary delegation ever to visit Taiwan in an institutional capacity,” the alliance said on Sunday.

Earlier, it announced that Taiwanese government officials and world-leading experts would attend the gathering, which will be conducted in Japanese, Mandarin, English and Spanish.

Taiwan’s foreign ministry confirmed on Monday that the island’s leader, William Lai Ching-te, would deliver an opening address, while his deputy, Hsiao Bi-khim, would attend the conference’s press event.
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During their three-day stay in Taiwan, the delegation will meet Hsiao at her office, attend a welcome dinner hosted by the foreign ministry and visit the island’s legislature and hi-tech companies. This aimed to provide a better understanding of local political and economic developments, cross-strait conditions and Taiwan’s role in the global supply chain, the ministry said.

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