*** Hundreds protest in Taiwan over summit with 'enemy' China | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Hundreds protest in Taiwan over summit with 'enemy' China

Hundreds of angry protesters massed outside Taiwan President Ma Ying-Jeou's office Saturday, condemning his warm exchange with China's leader in a summit that has fuelled fears the democratic island will be swallowed up by its giant rival.

The talks have been hailed as a historic opportunity to end decades of hostility between the two sides which split after a civil war, but there has been a backlash among Taiwanese suspicious over Ma's rapprochement policy.

Angry demonstrators tried to storm parliament overnight and 27 were arrested at the airport Saturday as Ma headed to a summit his opponents say is a sell-out to Beijing which is bent on expanding its influence.

Later, up to 500 protesters, representing an array of groups including farmers, rights activists and environmentalists, raged over the cordial get-together at a Singapore hotel where Ma told China's leader Xi Jinping that they already "feel like old friends".

"How can he... without any negotiation go to meet with the leader of our enemy? I believe this is getting to the level of treason," said Lin Hsiu-hsin, vice chairman of the Taiwan Association of University Professors.

Protest leaders were infuriated by Xi's comments that the two sides are "a family" that can never be divided -- a reference to the mainland's unchanging position that Taiwan is a breakaway province awaiting reunification.

"Xi Jinping said we belong to one China. Can you accept it?" Lee Ken-cheng from the Beijing-sceptic environmentalist Green Party bellowed to the crowd.

"No!" they roared back.

 

Photo Courtesy: Getty images