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Taiwan parties mass for rallies on eve of pivotal vote

  • Hundreds of thousands attend final election rallies
  • Taiwan votes for new president, parliament on Saturday
  • Three competing to be Taiwan's next president
  • China says will smash any Taiwan independence plots
Update : 13 Jan 2024, 01:01 AM

Hundreds of thousands of people flocked to noisy closing rallies on Friday as Taiwan's presidential candidates made a last push for votes in an election that China has warned could take the island closer to war.

Taiwan's bustling democracy of 23 million people is separated by a narrow 180-kilometre strait from communist-ruled China, which claims the island as part of its territory.

On Saturday's election is being closely watched around the world as the winner will lead the strategically important island -- a major producer of vital semiconductors -- as it manages ties with an increasingly assertive China.

Vice President Lai Ching-te, the front-runner candidate of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), paints the election as a choice between "democracy and autocracy" -- criticising his main opponent Hou Yu-ih of the Kuomintang (KMT) for being too "pro-China."

"After I get elected as the president, I will continue to take the path of democracy and peace. I will stand with the international camp of freedom and democracy. What's more, I will forever stand with Taiwan's people," he said.

In a stadium nearby, Hou called for his red-and-blue-clad supporters to kick out the DPP, which has been in power for eight years.

"This is a choice between war and peace... If Lai Ching-te is elected, the Taiwan Strait is very likely to fall into unrest," said Hou.

"Don't say that we are pro-China," said supporter Minai at Hou's final rally. "We just want the peaceful co-existence of both sides... I don't want there to be a war."

Hou, a former police chief who portrays himself as a "protector" of Taiwan, is echoing a line from Beijing, which has blasted Lai as a dangerous "separatist" who will bring "war and decline" to Taiwan.

Barely 12 hours before polls opened, China's defence ministry denounced the DPP for pushing "Taiwan toward the dangerous conditions of war" and said it will "crush" any attempts at Taiwan's "independence."

Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control. In recent years it has maintained a near-daily military presence around Taiwan, sending in warplanes and ships to its surroundings in "grey zone" harassment actions which fall short of outright provocation.

The weeks leading up to Saturday's vote have also seen a flurry of Chinese balloons crossing the Taiwan Strait's sensitive median line -- with a record five balloons appearing on Thursday -- which Taipei has slammed as a form of election interference.

All the sabre-rattling from across the Taiwan Strait means the island must build up its "self-defence to prevent the other side from bullying us," said DPP supporter Yoyo Chen.

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