TAIPEI (Reuters) – Taiwan has been holding since last month five people from Hong Kong who fled the Chinese-run city by boat and were picked up by Taiwan’s coast guard in the South China Sea, sources familiar with the situation told Reuters.
Democratic Taiwan has opened its doors to people from Hong Kong, which has been rocked by anti-government protests and where China has enforced a tough national security law. But Taiwan says anyone who enters must do so legally, though its borders are largely closed due to coronavirus prevention steps.
Five sources told Reuters that the five people held in detention by Taiwan’s coast guard had left by boat from Hong Kong and made it to the Taiwan-controlled Pratas Islands at the northern end of the South China Sea.
A Taiwan security source said they are currently at a Taiwan coast guard facility in the southern port city of Kaohsiung.
Taiwan’s official Central News Agency reported late on Sunday that the five “have basic rights including access to lawyers”, citing a unnamed source. It did not elaborate and Reuters was not able to independently confirm the report.
The government has declined to comment on the case, though it has been reported in Taiwan media, and opposition parties have criticised the government for not doing more to help Hong Kongers fleeing political persecution.
Premier Su Tseng-chang, asked about the five, told reporters on Monday that the government cared deeply about people from Hong Kong.
“As for the help to Hong Kong people, certain individual cases we cannot reveal,” he said.
Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je’s Taiwan People’s Party said at the weekend that the ruling Democratic Progressive Party needed to provide a clear explanation for the case and amend existing laws so Hong Kongers fleeing political persecution do not have to resort to using people smugglers.
China’s state-backed Global Times tabloid, published by the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily, wrote on Monday that the detention of the five showed that the Taiwan government’s pledges to help Hong Kongers was “fake”.
Last month China’s coast guard detained 12 people from Hong Kong on a boat bound for Taiwan. China’s foreign ministry says the 12 are separatists.
Hong Kong has become another source of tension between Taipei and Beijing, whose government claims Taiwan as sovereign Chinese territory. Taiwan has shown no interest in being ruled by autocratic China.
(Reporting by Yimou Lee and Ben Blanchard; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)