Patriot Alliance Association

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^ A: It is the day the Patriot Alliance Association (PAA) was founded as a political party; the PAA was founded as a political organization in November 12, 1993 (1993-11-12).
Sound truck belonging to the Patriot Alliance Association, with anti-Falun Gong and anti-Lee Teng-hui slogans, and declaring that the Senkaku (Diaoyu) Islands belong to China.

The (Chinese) Patriot Alliance Association (Chinese: 愛國同心會), abbreviated PAA, also known as the Concentric Patriotism Alliance (Chinese: 中華愛國同心會) or the Concentric Patriotism Association of China is a pro-Chinese Communist Party organization that supports the unification of Taiwan and mainland China.[3][4] The PAA is described as "far-right" or "conservative", but PAA is a pro-Chinese Communist Party, it is different from the mainstream conservatives including the Kuomintang/Pan-Blue Coalition, who claim Republic of China legitimacy.

The organization was founded in 1993 and has been subjected to multiple public complaints of harassment and aggression. Because of this, its members have been informally labeled "Communist thugs in Taiwan".[4] Previous attacks by members of the PAA have targeted Falun Gong-practitioners in front of the Taipei 101 square in 2010.[3][5]

Zhang Xiuye [zh] is a founding member of the Chinese Patriotic Alliance Association. She was born in Shanghai, married a Taiwanese and then moved to Taiwan around 1993, after which she and her husband divorced.[4] According to some sources, Zhang is considered the leader of the PAA.[5]

Another member of the PAA is the Vietnamese-born Su An-sheng (蘇安生), who had reportedly kicked the former President of Taiwan, Chen Shui-bian, in the back.[6][7][8]

In July 2022, the Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office disclosed that the PAA's attempts to influence Taiwanese politics were funded by the Chinese government's Taiwan Affairs Office. Wanted notices were issued for Lin Ming-mei, the wife of former party chairman Chou Ching-chun, and the party's secretary-general, Zhang Xiuye.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ 新台灣新闻周刊: Issues 388-396. 本土文化事業有限公司. 2003. p. 8. ... 右派團體「愛國同心會」數人赴榮總抗議李登輝的畫面。
  2. ^ 蕭嘉弘 (2018-09-21). "台灣急統派不是民主極右勢力!" [Taiwan's 'radical pro-unification factions' is not a 'democratic far-right'.]. 民報 Taiwan People News. Archived from the original on 2023-06-18. 標榜大中國民族主義,屬於極右的愛國同心會和統促黨則完全不同,... [The far-right Patriot Alliance Association and Chinese Unification Promotion Party, which advocates Chinese ultra-nationalism, is completely different, ...]
  3. ^ a b Wei, Katherine (21 January 2015). "Ko demands new Xinyi police chief report on alleged Falun Gong fight". The China Post.
  4. ^ a b c Cole, J. Michael (16 August 2014). "Who's Waving Those PRC Flags (and Beating People Up) at Taipei 101?". Thinking Taiwan.
  5. ^ a b Min-Hua Chiang (30 October 2015). China-Taiwan Rapprochement: The Political Economy of Cross-Straits Relations. Routledge. p. 92. ISBN 9781317427940.
  6. ^ "Man sentenced to 3 days in jail for kicking ex-president". Taiwan News. 22 July 2008. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  7. ^ Chang, Rich; Shu-ling, Ko (22 July 2008). "Chen kicked by protester at hearing". Taipei Times. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  8. ^ "Anklage: Aktivist trat Taiwans Ex-Präsidenten Chen in den Hintern". Der Standard (in German). 12 September 2008. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  9. ^ Chien, Li-chung; Chung, Jake (6 July 2022). "TAO funded pro-unification patriotism party". Taipei Times. Retrieved 7 July 2022.

External links

  • Taiwan: Spies, Lies and Cross-straits Ties. People and Power, Al Jazeera English, September 2018
  • J. Michael Cole: China Acting on ‘Lebanonization’ Threat Against Taiwan. Taiwan Sentinel, 8 May 2018