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Taiwan Expels Chinese Influencers Accused of Calling for Invasion

The Taiwanese government confirmed this week that three Chinese women had ordered by Tuesday to leave the country by the end of March.

Focus Taiwan, an agency affiliated with Channel News Asia in Singapore; It will be identified Three women as Liu Zhenya, Xiao Wei and En Qi. Li Zhenya, the most well-known of the three, is the “Taiwan Yaya” and is a “influencer” famous for Douin, the Chinese version of Tiktok. Liu was ordered to leave or be deported by Tuesday. Liu organized a press conference Tuesday with her Taiwanese husband, denounced removal orders that attracted anti-communist protesters demanding she leave.

Xiao Wei is also reportedly an influencer, and appeared in a video about Chinese social media platforms. Her husband, the Taiwanese husband, argued in a Chinese interview that the communist appeal to China was intended to merely sell the product to Chinese audiences and supplement the revenue rather than as a serious political statement.

The Taiwan National Immigration Agency (NIA) argued that women wanted China to “reunite” with Taiwan, or in other words, to support Taiwan's military aggression.

“After the administrative penalty was issued, we immediately notified the relevant authorities to revoke the permit,” said Taiwan's Home Minister Liu Shih-Fang I said See the residence and work permits given to the woman in question on Monday.

Following the initial announcement of the deletion order, the NIA statement “We are fully invested in investigating the cases in question and our firm position to maintain national security and social stability remains unchanged.” It allegedly stated that the Taiwanese government had not properly studied the incident before revoking its residence permit, but was “internet rumors.”

“The majority of new residents and allies allies all agree with the core values ​​of democracy and freedom,” the NIA concluded.

Li, known as “Taiwan Yaya”, Recognised In an interview Monday, she argued that while she supports Taiwan's acquisition of China, or “unification,” social media comments about “unification by military force” were speculative and unsupportive, only peacefully. She also insisted that she would not leave the country, pointing out that she had a Taiwanese husband and three children who were significantly affected by her mother.

Focus Taiwan said it reported that Liu appealed for removal but was denied accused of engaging in “war propaganda.”

Li and her husband held A local time press conference Tuesday morning in front of the Home Office in Taipei resisted removal from the country. The event attracted a crowd of anti-communist activists (over 100 people). Radio Taiwan International explained the scene:

More than 100 protesters came to the front of the rally, YouTube creator and anti-CCP activist Pa Chiung and rapper Chen Po-Yuan, who appeared in support of Liu's deportation. “If your homeland is so wonderful, come back!” And in connection with the Tiananmen Square massacre that took place on June 4, 1989, the slogans repeated “Back” (got the breeze) and “8964.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rqzvcn800hg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1e_ikmzhrc

Taiwan's Prime Minister Jung Thailand Confirmed On Tuesday, Taipei intended to deport Li.

“No illegal activities that violate national security will be strictly handled and there is no room for compromise.” Taipei time Cho reported that he was saying it. “Law freedom has limitations, as it cannot compromise Taiwan's integrity and continued survival.

Cho cited the US Supreme Court's restrictions on freedom of speech as evidence that these restrictions could exist in a free society. Taipei time Added it without specifying the Supreme Court jurisprudence he mentioned.

The NIA reportedly provided Li with a “period of bounty” 10 days before she was deported.

The Taiwanese husband of Xiao Wei, one of the other women facing deportation, reportedly told a Taiwanese news outlet Nownews The image of her waving the Chinese flag in public on social media and calling for “unification” was an attempt to attract Chinese buyers of products she had been shilling on social media rather than political statements.

Nownews said her husband said that after lunchbox sales fell, the family lost substantial income and that Xiao had no education outside of primary school, so she turned to Chinese social media for profit. As Nownews mentioned the man, “Xiao” claimed she was a “hook” to make her spend money as a “hook” in China simply “say what they want to hear”, and was provided as evidence that she didn't mention “reintegration” on Chinese social media platforms such as Facebook.

Taiwan Ministry of Law address Monday's free speech concerns say it requires public comment on whether Taiwan should impose statutory criminal restrictions on the “defense war.”

“Criminal cases will be dealt with based on crimes listed in the criminal code, including inciting, intimidation, and defamation,” the ministry said in a statement. “We must first listen to the public and study this issue with caution as to whether there should be specific laws against advocacy for war, or whether a person is deemed to be committed a crime or if an executive penalty should be required to make such a statement.”

Follow Francis Martel Facebook and Twitter.

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