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Taiwan Minimizes ‘Republic of China’ in Redesigned Passport

Taiwan has redesigned it’s passport so that its citizens are not mistaken for being Chinese.

Taiwan Minimizes ‘Republic of China’ in Redesigned Passport
The new Taiwan passport. (Photo: Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

Taiwan has unveiled a redesigned passport in an effort to stop its citizens being mistaken for Chinese while traveling abroad.

The new passport omits “Republic of China” -- the official name by which Taiwan refers to itself -- in larger English print from the Taiwanese passport cover.

Taiwan Minimizes ‘Republic of China’ in Redesigned Passport

“Republic of China” remains written in Chinese, and in smaller English writing surrounding Taiwan’s official sun emblem in the center of the cover. The new passports will be issued from January.

“Many countries tightened immigration checks after Covid-19 broke out in January,” Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said at Wednesday’s unveiling of the new design. “To help citizens avoid being falsely identified as Chinese, lawmakers agreed in July to make Taiwanese passports more recognizable and easier to distinguish from Chinese ones to uphold our citizens’ dignity.”

The redesign is the latest move by President Tsai Ing-wen to assert Taiwan’s separate status from the People’s Republic of China. While Beijing views the democratic island as part of its territory, Tsai’s government views Taiwan as a de facto independent nation.

Many supporters of Tsai’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party chafe at the official Republic of China state title, viewing it as a relic of the Chinese civil war imposed on Taiwan when Chiang Kai-shek fled to the island in 1949 after losing to Mao Zedong’s Communists.

Tsai called the redesign a “common wish” among Taiwanese.

“The redesigned passport stresses the recognizability of Taiwan,” she told a briefing in Taipei. She said it would ensure “the convenience and safety of Taiwan citizens.”

China on Wednesday repeated its stance that Taiwan is an “unalienable” part of its territory.

“I want to reiterate that no matter what the DPP authorities’ petty moves are, there is only one China in the world,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a daily briefing in Beijing.

The next high-profile name change could be for China Airlines, Taiwan’s flag carrier. Lawmakers approved a resolution in July mandating the government to devise feasible ways to rename the airline to avoid it being mistaken for a Chinese company.

Since coming into power in 2016, Tsai has sought to strengthen ties with the U.S. through weapons purchases and trade talks to counter increasingly assertive Chinese moves to isolate Taiwan. She has offered to hold talks with Beijing but only on the condition China accepts Taiwan as an equal.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.