Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen waves to supporters outside her campaign headquarters in Taipei on Jan. 11. President Tsai Ing-wen declared victory in Taiwan's election on that day as votes were being counted after an election battle dominated by the democratic island's fraught relationship with China. (Photo by Sam Yeh/AFP)
Hong Kong’s democracy protesters and politicians have hailed a sweeping election win by Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen as a boost for their movement that puts further pressure on China.
Some
who left the Asian financial hub after nearly seven months of often violent
protests said they welcomed Tsai’s historic win with more than 8 million votes,
exceeding the tally of any previous president.
“A weight has been lifted off my shoulders,” said a Hong Kong protester in Taipei, who gave his name only as Roger and said he had feared being kicked out of Taiwan if its China-friendly opposition Kuomintang party was swept to power.
Authorities
in Chinese-ruled Hong Kong have arrested more than 7,000 people, many on
charges of rioting that can carry jail terms of up to 10 years.
“I
hope Hong Kong can be like Taiwan, that in the time of our next generation,
Hong Kong will be a democratic and free place,” said Ventus Lau, one of
the organizers of a 1,000-strong rally in Hong Kong against the Chinese
Communist Party.
“That’s
why, in 2020, we need to fight autocracy together with the international
community,” Lau said on Jan. 12.
Some
in the crowd waved black Hong Kong protest flags with the slogan, “Free
Hong Kong. Revolution Now,” as Tsai delivered a victory speech to ecstatic
supporters on Jan. 11.
“I
believe many democratic countries in the world, and many friends in Hong Kong,
will feel happy about our collective decision,” Tsai said, drawing
plaudits in Hong Kong’s online protester forums and groups on the Telegram
messaging app.
The slogan “Today Taiwan, Tomorrow Hong Kong” has sprung up after the landslide win, to express the hope that Hong Kong too will one day have full democracy.
Supporters celebrate the poll victory of Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen and chant slogans in support of pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong, outside the Democratic Progressive Party’s headquarters as results came in for the general election in Taipei on Jan. 11. (Photo by Chris Stowers/AFP)
The
former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997 amid promises it would
be granted a high degree of autonomy and eventual universal suffrage.
But
China’s tightening grip on the city and Beijing’s failure to live up to its
promises have fed the unrest, in one of the biggest popular challenges to the
ruling Communist Party since the return.
Many
credit the protests
with having helped to sway the Taiwan election in Tsai’s favor and deliver a
rebuke to Beijing.
Tsai’s
government, which also won a parliamentary majority, owed Hong Kong more
concrete support, said Roger Wong, a newly elected pro-democracy district councilor
from the city who attended victory celebrations in Taipei.
“I
hope Taiwan can now speak up more for Hong Kong, especially the young
people,” said Wong, 41, one of about 10 politicians who visited Taiwan for the election after a
big win in November’s district polls.
While
Taiwan has discreetly extended tourist visas and offered special mid-year
intakes for Hong Kong students at some universities, calls have grown to amend
the law with special provisions for the territory.
“This
election is proof that Xi Jinping’s strategy of keeping Hong Kong and Taiwan
under control is a total failure,” said Leung Man-to, a political science
professor at the National Cheng Kung University in Tainan, referring to China’s
leader.
“Taiwan
should offer some kind of formal channel for Hong Kong people in exile to seek political
asylum … Tsai never dared do anything substantial before, but she could
now try to do something new, even if it provokes Beijing.”