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- <text id=93CT1899>
- <link 89TT3307>
- <title>
- Taiwan--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- East Asia
- Taiwan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> According to Chinese sources, Chinese migration to Taiwan
- began as early as A.D. 500. Taiwan seems to have been known,
- albeit vaguely, to Sung Dynasty historians as early as the 10th
- century. Dutch traders first claimed the island in 1624 as a
- base for Dutch commerce with Japan and the China coast. Dutch
- colonists administered the island and is predominantly aborigine
- population until 1661. The first major influx of migrants from
- the Chinese mainland came during the Dutch period, sparked by
- the political and economic chaos on the China coast during the
- twilight of the Ming Dynasty and at the time of the Manchu
- invasion.
- </p>
- <p> In 1664, a Chinese fleet led by the Ming loyalist Zheng
- Chenggong (known in the West as "Koxinga") retreated from the
- mainland and occupied Taiwan. Zheng expelled the Dutch and
- established Taiwan as a base in his attempt to restore the Ming
- Dynasty. He died shortly thereafter, and, in 1683, his
- successors submitted to Manchu control.
- </p>
- <p> Manchu China ruled Taiwan as a frontier district until it was
- declared a separate Chinese province in 1886. During the 18th
- and 19th centuries, migration from China's coastal Provinces of
- Fukien and Kwangtung steadily increased, and Chinese supplanted
- aborigines as the dominant population group. In 1895, a weakened
- Imperial China ceded Taiwan to Japan following the first
- Sino-Japanese war.
- </p>
- <p> During its 50 years (1895-1945) of colonial domination, Japan
- expended considerable effort in developing Taiwan's economy. The
- Japanese established agricultural research stations, farmers'
- cooperatives, and large-scale irrigation projects that raised
- Taiwan's agriculture from primitive subsistence farming to a
- thriving market economy. The construction of a modern
- transportation network and a series of hydroelectric and thermal
- power plants was the beginning of an economic infrastructure
- that became the foundation for Taiwan's later industrial
- development. Under Japanese rule, an advanced school system
- spread literacy and gave Taiwan an educated labor force.
- </p>
- <p> At the end of World War II in 1945, Taiwan reverted to
- Chinese rule. During the immediate postwar period, the
- Nationalist Chinese administration on Taiwan was repressive and
- corrupt. These conditions led to extreme Taiwanese discontent
- with the newly arrived authorities from the China mainland, and
- antimainlander violence flared on February 28, 1947. The
- uprising was swiftly and brutally suppressed by Nationalist
- Chinese troops. Although Taiwanese and mainlanders have learned
- to live together amicably and prosperously over the ensuing
- three and one-half decades, a lingering distrust remains
- beneath the surface.
- </p>
- <p> Toward the end of the civil war on the China mainland, some 2
- million predominantly military, government, and business
- refugees fled to Taiwan. After the communist victory, Chiang
- Kaishek established his "provisional" capital in Taipei in
- December 1949.
- </p>
- <p> In early 1949, the Nationalist authorities started
- implementing a far-reaching and highly successful land reform
- program. The redistribution of land among small farmers was
- followed by a significant increase in farm production. In the
- land reform program, the Nationalist authorities compensated
- large landowners with commodities certificates and stock in
- state-owned light industries. Although some landowners were left
- impoverished by the compensation, others were able to turn
- theirs into capital with which to start new, nonagricultural
- commercial and industrial enterprises. These new entrepreneurs
- became Taiwan's first industrial capitalists who, with refugee
- businessmen from the mainland, managed Taiwan's transition from
- an agricultural to a commercial, industrial economy. Since
- 1949, Taiwan has developed steadily into a major international
- trading power. Tremendous prosperity on the island has brought
- economic and social stability.
- </p>
- <p>Current Political Conditions
- </p>
- <p> When President Chiang Ching-kuo died on January 13, 1988, he
- was succeeded by Vice President Lee Teng-hui, who had been
- elected along with Chiang by the National Assembly to a 6-year
- term in 1978.
- </p>
- <p> President Lee Teng-hui also is Acting Chairman of the ruling
- Kuomintang (KMT-Nationalist Party). Formerly Mayor of Taipei and
- Governor of Taiwan Province, Lee is aware of the pluralistic
- nature of Taiwan's society and will continue Chiang Ching-kuo's
- policy of opening the political process to more Taiwanese
- participation while still maintaining effective KMT control.
- </p>
- <p> The KMT organization closely parallels the administrative
- structure at all levels. Most of the top officials, including
- cabinet members and the governor of Taiwan Province, are members
- of its Central Standing Committee. The Central Standing
- Committee is elected annually by the Central Committee of the
- KMT from nominees proposed by the party's chairman. At lower
- levels, KMT committees are organized on a provincial, county,
- and district basis and in various vocational groupings.
- </p>
- <p> Party funds are derived from dues and contributions paid by
- members and from the proceeds of party-operated businesses. The
- KMT has more than 2 million paying members, about two-thirds of
- whom are of Taiwanese origin. Most senior military officers and
- civilian officials are KMT members.
- </p>
- <p> A revision of the constitution in 1948 granted virtually
- unlimited emergency powers to the president. These powers
- remained in effect until July 15, 1987, when President Chiang's
- reform initiative resulted in the lifting of martial law. For
- the nearly four decades under martial rule, emergency powers
- were the basis for strict security measures. Opposition to
- basic policy (such as expressing views contrary to the
- authorities' claim to represent all China, or supporting
- independent legal status for Taiwan) were considered seditious
- and thus punishable under martial law. Otherwise, however,
- personal freedoms, particularly during recent years, were
- considerable.
- </p>
- <p> Concurrent with the lifting of martial law in 1987 was
- passage of a new national security law (NSL). In a significant
- departure from martial law, the NSL ensures that civilians will
- not be subject to court martial. Further, the NSL transfers
- control of Taiwan entry and exit permits from the Taiwan
- Garrison Command, a military security organization, to civilian
- authorities. However, the NSL still forbids groups to violate
- the constitution, or advocate communism or the division of
- "national territory."
- </p>
- <p> Beyond the recent lifting of martial law, Taiwan authorities
- are considering further political reforms with the goal of
- moving toward a more democratic system. Proposals for reforms
- are being formulated in press censorship, labor rights, the
- judicial system, lifting the ban on new political parties,
- future composition of the legislature, rationalization of the
- legal basis of provincial authorities, and others.
- </p>
- <p> Until 1986, Taiwan's political system was effectively
- one-party. Two minor political parties had been organized since
- before the KMT retreated to Taiwan, but they had no significant
- influence or following. In addition, candidates opposing the KMT
- ran in elections as independents or "nonpartisans." These
- "nonpartisans" met with increasing success, and by the elections
- of 1977 and 1980, they had captured about one-quarter of
- Legislative Yuan seats up for election. Later, in 1983
- elections, strong KMT organization temporarily reversed the
- "nonpartisans" gains. However, before elections in 1986, many
- "nonpartisans" grouped together to formally--although
- illegally--form Taiwan's first new political party in over
- four decades: the Democratic Progressive Party. Despite the
- official ban on forming new parties, Taiwan authorities did not
- prohibit the DPP from operating, and in 1986 elections, DPP and
- independent candidates captured more than 20% of the vote.
- </p>
- <p> Since the DPP came about as a coalition of formerly
- independent "nonpartisans," its membership includes factions
- with widely varying positions on political issues. Most DPP
- leaders hold moderate opinions and see their primary purpose as
- implementing gradual change and providing a system of checks and
- balances in the political structure. However, due to its
- orientation toward the Taiwanese population, the DPP platform
- includes outspoken positions on some of the most sensitive
- issues in Taiwan politics. For example, the DPP advocates
- "self-determination," a term party leaders say is not
- necessarily a call for Taiwan's secession from China but a
- demand that the people of Taiwan be allowed to determine their
- own future. However, a number of ranking DPP officials do, in a
- direct challenge to steadfast tenets of both the Kuomintang and
- the P.R.C.'s leaders, openly advocate Taiwan independence. The
- DPP also advocates abolishing permanently elected mainlander
- seats in the National Assembly and Legislative Yuan, as well as
- other changes in the political system.
- </p>
- <p> Under current law, the DPP is still considered to be an
- illegal party (although in early 1988, authorities were
- formulating proposals to allow legalization of new parties).
- However, despite its lack of official status, as well as its
- vocal advocation of reform in areas most sensitive to Taiwan
- authorities, the authorities have not significantly restricted
- DPP activities. In fact, authorities have made increasingly
- visible efforts to maintain communications with the DPP.
- Recently, KMT leaders advanced what has become de facto
- recognition of the DPP by publicly consulting with DPP members
- on formulating legislation.
- </p>
- <p> Although friction between mainlanders and native Taiwanese
- remains a problem, it has abated with time and the gradual
- melding of the two Chinese communities. In 1972, Premier Chiang
- Ching-kuo began a concerted effort to bring Taiwanese into more
- senior positions in the central administrative apparatus.
- Taiwanese now hold 8 of 19 ministerial positions in the cabinet
- and 14 of 31 positions on the KMT Party Central Standing
- Committee. Of the some 2 million KMT members, about 70% are
- Taiwanese. Taiwanese hold most of the elective and appointive
- positions at the provincial and local levels; nonetheless,
- mainlanders continue to exercise overwhelming control in the
- central governing bodies.
- </p>
- <p> Upon withdrawing from the mainland to Taiwan in 1949,
- President Chiang Kai-shek brought with him a relatively
- sophisticated bureaucracy, party organization, and military
- establishment designed on the scale of China as a whole and much
- larger than required to rule Taiwan. Despite the burden this
- bureaucracy placed on the island's limited resources, it
- contributed to the authorities' ability to implement policies to
- which they had earlier been committed but had been unable to
- carry out while governing the mainland. These policies, aided by
- generous U.S. aid in the early years and the hard work of the
- local population, greatly facilitated the island's rapid
- modernization.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
- March 1988.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-