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Taiwan Province, People's Republic of China

Taiwan Province is a nominal administrative division of the People's Republic of China (PRC). The PRC constitution defines Taiwan as part of its territories[2] although the PRC has never controlled Taiwan since the PRC's establishment in 1949.[3] Taiwan is currently administered by the Republic of China (ROC).

Taiwan
台湾
Name transcription(s)
 • Chinese台湾省 (Táiwān Shěng)
 • AbbreviationTW / (pinyin: Tái; Hokkien: Tâi; Hakka: Thòi)
 • Hokkien POJTâi-oân-séng
 • Hakka PFSThòi-vàn-sén or Thòi-vân-sén
Map showing the location of Taiwan Province
Coordinates: 23°42′N 121°00′E / 23.7°N 121.0°E / 23.7; 121.0
Country People's Republic of China
Established from Fujian1887
Cession to Japan17 April 1895
Placed under the control of the ROC25 October 1945
Claimed as part of PRC1 October 1949
CapitalTaipei
Largest cityNew Taipei
DivisionsSee boundary change
Government
 • CCP SecretarySee representation
 • GovernorSee representation
 • National People's Congress Representation13 deputies
Area
 • Total35,581 km2 (13,738 sq mi)
 • Rank28th
Demographics
 • Ethnic composition98% Han Chinese
2% Gaoshan people
ISO 3166 codeCN-TW
GDP (2022 estimate)[1]CN¥5.12 trillion
 • Per capitaCN¥219,560
HDI (2021)0.916 very high
Taiwan Province
"Taiwan" in Traditional (top) and Simplified (bottom) Chinese characters
Simplified Chinese台湾省
Traditional Chinese臺灣省
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTáiwān Shěng
Bopomofoㄊㄞˊ   ㄨㄢ   ㄕㄥˇ
Gwoyeu RomatzyhTair'uan Sheeng
Wade–GilesTʻai²-wan¹ Shêng³
Tongyong PinyinTáiwan Shěng
MPS2Táiwān Shěng
IPA[tʰǎɪ.wán ʂə̀ŋ]
Hakka
Pha̍k-fa-sṳThòi-vàn-sén or
Thòi-vân-sén
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationTòihwāan Sáang
JyutpingToi4waan1 Saang2
IPA[tʰɔːi˩.waːn˥ saːŋ˧˥]
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTâi-oân-séng
Tâi-lôTâi-uân-síng
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCDài-uăng sēng

The political status of Taiwan is complex. Following the Chinese Civil War, the PRC considers itself the successor state of the pre-1949 ROC and the sole legitimate government of "China" since its founding on 1 October 1949, and claims Taiwan and the Penghu Islands as part of its territory under the One China principle. However, the PRC has never administered Taiwan: the Taiwan Area, including all of the contemporary Taiwan Province, is currently administered by the government of the Republic of China (ROC), which disputes the PRC's claims.

The People's Republic of China was founded in 1949 near the end of the Chinese Civil War. While by 1950 it had obtained control over most of the territories previously administered by the Republic of China (ROC), it never gained control of an area made up of Taiwan. Instead, Taiwan has been administered by the ROC (which is now commonly known as "Taiwan") since the end of World War II in 1945, continuing through the Chinese Civil War and past the foundation of the People's Republic of China in 1949.

While the PRC claims Taiwan as part of its territory, it recognises Taiwan is outside its actual territory of control and does not maintain a government in exile for Taiwan Province. However, its CCP National Congress reserves a position for legislators that represent Taiwan, most of whom are of Taiwanese descent but were born in and are residents of mainland China, except for one representative (Lu Li'an) who was born and grew up in Taiwan. The Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council of the People's Republic of China is the part of the PRC government that has responsibility over Taiwan-related matters, but it is neither tasked with, nor presented as, a shadow administration for Taiwan. Instead, the ROC government, which actually controls Taiwan Province, is referred to by the PRC as the "Taiwan authorities".[4]

In 1979, the PRC proposed that under a hypothetical unification Taiwan would become a Special Administrative Region rather than a province.[5]

Usage in the People's Republic of China Edit

Despite formal status of a province, the term "Taiwan Province" is now only used in the most formal circumstances such as National People's Congress.[citation needed] In domestic contexts that excludes Hong Kong and Macau, the number of provinces (including autonomous regions, municipalities) is always stated as 31 (Taiwan is not counted).[citation needed]

In official PRC statistics involving Taiwan, "Taiwan Area" is widely used instead, corresponding to the ROC's Free Area of the Republic of China, and is treated together with Special Administrative Regions rather than other provinces.[6] Taiwan Province only includes Taiwan and associated islands such as the Pescadores Islands, but "Taiwan Area" (the same as "Taiwan Area" as used by ROC, a.k.a.) is all area administered by Taipei and includes Fujian islands such as Kinmen, Matsu, as well as (at least in principle) Pratas Island (Tungsha/Dongsha) (part of Cijin District, Kaoshiung; claimed as part of Guangdong Province by the PRC) and Taiping Islands (assigned to Kaoshiung by ROC, and to Sansha and Hainan by PRC).[citation needed] In 2017 Xinhua News Agency issued guidelines mandating no scare quotes for all members of local governments of Taiwan authorities (except Fujian and Lienchiang) and preferring the term "Taiwan Area" over the term "Taiwan Province, People's Republic of China", since the latter does not include the Kinmen and Matsu islands.[7]

Administrative divisions Edit

Maps published by the PRC show Taiwan Province and its subdivisions in accordance with its pre-1949 boundaries. Until recently, the ROC adopted an analogous practice of depicting mainland administrative boundaries in maps the way they were in 1949, to demonstrate that the ROC did not recognise the PRC government, or any boundary changes enacted by them since 1949, as legitimate.[citation needed]

Even before this, the practice of not recognizing any boundary changes made to Taiwan had ended. For example, New Taipei is accepted instead of Taipei County, and the merging of Kaohsiung City and Kaohsiung County is accepted on all maps published by PRC entities. Maps published in PRC do not treat borders between Taiwan Province (Republic of China) and Special Municipalities as provincial borders, but county borders, and often do not mandate a capital for Taiwan at all. The borders between Kinmen and Matsu and rest of Fujian Province are never denoted as provincial borders let alone international.[citation needed]

The official databases of PRC do not show any internal divisions of Taiwan, all of them showing "data not yet available" (this no longer applies to Hong Kong and Macau).[citation needed]

As of 2018, PRC official map service Tianditu treats all six special municipalities as prefecture-level cities, all three provincial cities as county-level cities directly administered by the province, and all fourteen county-administered cities as subdistricts under each individual county's jurisdiction.[citation needed]


Administrative subdivisions (Tianditu & Mapping database)[8]
Administrative divisions of Taiwan
ROC (Units) PRC (Units) Divisions
Special municipality 直轄市 Prefecture-level city 地级市 (6) Kaohsiung, New Taipei, Taichung, Tainan, Taipei, Taoyuan
Provincial city 省轄市 County-level city 县级市
(Directly administered 直辖)
(3) Chiayi, Hsinchu, Keelung
County County
(Directly administered 直辖)
(11) Changhua County, Chiayi County, Hsinchu County,
Hualien County, Miaoli County, Nantou County, Penghu County,
Pingtung County, Taitung County, Yilan County, Yunlin County
(Special municipalities) District (直轄市)區 District (158 divisions)
Indigenous district 原住民區
(Provincial city) District (省轄市)區 Subdistrict (12 divisions)
County-administered city 縣轄市 (14 divisions)
Urban township Town (38 divisions)
Rural township Township (146 divisions)
Indigenous township 山地鄉
Urban village Community (5,852 divisions)
Rural village Village (1,850 divisions)
Neighborhoods n/a

Politics Edit

Legislative representation Edit

Although Taiwan Province is not under PRC control, thirteen delegates are elected to represent Taiwan Province to the National People's Congress.[citation needed]

The election of these delegates for Taiwan Province is done in accordance with the Decision (from time to time made) of the relevant Session of relevant National People's Congress of the PRC on the number of deputies to the National People's Congress and the election of the deputies.[9] For example, in 2002 that Decision was as follows:[9]

"For the time being, 13 deputies representing Taiwan Province shall be elected from among people of Taiwan origin in the other provinces, the autonomous regions, and the municipalities directly under the Central Government, and the Chinese People's Liberation Army."

Having regard to the relevant Decision, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress adopts a "Plan for the Consultative Election of Deputies of Taiwan Province to the National People's Congress". The Plan typically provides that "the deputies will be elected in Beijing through consultation from among representatives sent by Taiwan compatriots in these provinces, autonomous regions, and municipalities directly under the Central Government and in the Chinese People's Liberation Army."[9]

In the case of the 2002 election, the Standing Committee noted that there were more than 36,000 "Taiwan compatriots" in the 31 provinces, autonomous regions, and municipalities directly under the Central Government and the central Party, government and army institutions. It was decided that 122 representatives would participate in the conference for election through consultation. The number of representatives was allocated on the basis of the geographic distribution of Taiwan compatriots on the mainland and the standing committees of the people's congresses of the provinces, autonomous regions, and municipalities directly under the Central Government were responsible for making arrangements for the election of the representatives through consultation. The Standing Committee's Plan also provided that the election should be "conducted in a democratic manner".[9]

After the latest election at the 13th National People's Congress, 13 of the Taiwan representatives for the National People's Congress are:[10]

  • Cai Peihui (蔡培輝)
  • Ceng Liqun (曾力群)
  • Chen Jun (陳軍), Amis
  • Chen Yunying (陳雲英), born in Taipei
  • Fu Zhiguan (符之冠)
  • Huang Zhixian (黃志賢), born in Mainland China to a mother from Tainan
  • Liang Zhiqiang (梁志強), born in Mainland China to parents from Miaoli County
  • Liao Haiying (廖海鷹)
  • Lin Qing (林青), born in Taipei
  • Xu Pei (許沛)
  • Zhang Xiaodong (張曉東)
  • Zhang Xiong (張雄)
  • Zou Zhenqiu (鄒振球)

Nomenclatures for the ROC government used by PRC Edit

Since the PRC does not recognise the ROC as legitimate, PRC government and media refers to some ROC government offices and institutions using generic description which does not imply endorsement of the ROC's claim to be a legitimate government of either Taiwan or China. The precise replacements used are not officially designated, so the politically designated names for Taiwan have small variations across different source from within the PRC.[citation needed]

Since 21 July 2021, RTHK in Hong Kong has also imposed the same restrictions on its staff to prevent them from implying Taiwan as an independent state.[11]

For some cases, where the name does not significantly imply sovereignty, the name remains the same, such as for the Mainland Affairs Council,[12] county[13] and mayor.[14]

Government bodies Edit

ROC Government officials Edit

Educational institutions Edit

Events Edit

Demographics Edit

While demographic data for Taiwan Province published by the PRC government respects the census figures published by the ROC government for the territory, the PRC government does not recognise the ethnic classifications of Taiwanese indigenous peoples adopted by the ROC. Instead, the PRC government classifies all Taiwanese indigenous peoples as Gaoshan people, one of the 56 recognized ethnicities of the PRC.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Report for Selected Countries and Subjects". International Monetary Fund.
  2. ^ "Constitution of the People's Republic of China". The National People’s Congress. Retrieved 12 June 2022.
  3. ^ Donald S. Zagoria (30 October 2003). Breaking the China-Taiwan Impasse. ABC-CLIO. pp. 68–. ISBN 978-0-313-05755-7. OCLC 1058389524. Retrieved 20 March 2022. The fact is that the People's Republic of China (PRC), while claiming sovereignty over Taiwan, has never ruled Taiwan since the PRC's establishment in 1949.
  4. ^ . Gov.cn. Archived from the original on 2014-01-08. Retrieved 2019-04-19.
  5. ^ Bush, Richard C. (2019-01-07). "8 key things to notice from Xi Jinping's New Year speech on Taiwan". Brookings. Retrieved 2019-01-09.
  6. ^ "截至6月18日24时新型冠状病毒肺炎疫情最新情况 COVID-19 latest situation as of 24:00 June 18 (UTC+8)". nhc.gov.cn. Retrieved 2020-06-19.
  7. ^ 靳, 倩倩. . weixin. 广东工业大学大数据战略研究院. Archived from the original on 30 April 2021. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  8. ^ "Tianditu". Tianditu. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d Plan for the Consultative Election of Deputies of Taiwan Province to the Tenth National People's Congress, 2002 (Government of the PRC website)
  10. ^ DeAeth, Duncan (26 February 2018). "Only 2 of 13 deputies for Taiwan in China's Nat. People's Congress are from Taiwan". Taiwan News. Retrieved 26 February 2018.
  11. ^ "New rules laid down for RTHK over Taiwan stories". RTHK. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  12. ^ "Taiwan' s mainland affairs authority congratulates Macao' s Chui on reelection". Shanghai Daily. 2015-06-18. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  13. ^ "Lee Teng-hui's Diaoyu Islands remarks reprimanded in Taiwan_News on Taiwan_ENG.TAIWAN.CN". eng.taiwan.cn.
  14. ^ 张玲 (2014-06-30). "Headline_Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council PRC". Gwytb.gov.cn. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  15. ^ [1] 9 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ "Truck crashes into Taiwan leader's office building - People's Daily Online". English.peopledaily.com.cn. 2014-01-26. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  17. ^ a b c d "Taiwan's executive body to be reshuffled - Xinhua | English.news.cn". News.xinhuanet.com. 2013-02-01. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  18. ^ "Taiwan legislative body reviews no-confidence motion". chinadaily.com.cn. 2013-10-14. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  19. ^ "Headline_Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council PRC". Gwytb.gov.cn. 2011-01-06. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  20. ^ a b "Taiwan's food safety office opens amid scandals - Xinhua | English.news.cn". News.xinhuanet.com. 2014-10-22. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  21. ^ "Candidates register for Taiwan leader election - Xinhua - English.news.cn". news.xinhuanet.com.
  22. ^ "Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou re-elected KMT chairman - People's Daily Online". English.peopledaily.com.cn. 2013-07-21. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  23. ^ "Taiwan's KMT confirms appointments of four vice chairmen - Xinhua | English.news.cn". News.xinhuanet.com. 2014-09-14. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  24. ^ "20 killed, 270 injured in Taiwan gas leak explosions". China Daily. 1 August 2014. Retrieved 20 October 2021. Jiang Yi-huah, the island's executive chief...
  25. ^ "Taiwan demands apology from Philippines for fisherman's death - Xinhua | English.news.cn". News.xinhuanet.com. 2013-05-10. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  26. ^ "Mainland's Taiwan affairs chief highlights long-waited trip - Xinhua | English.news.cn". News.xinhuanet.com. 2014-06-25. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  27. ^ "Taiwan punishes officers after celebrity's Apache chopper visit_News on Taiwan_ENG.TAIWAN.CN". eng.taiwan.cn.
  28. ^ 张玲 (2014-08-11). "Headline_Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council PRC". Gwytb.gov.cn. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  29. ^ "Political meeting to promote peaceful development of cross-Strait relations: Taiwan experts - Xinhua | English.news.cn". News.xinhuanet.com. 2014-06-15. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  30. ^ "A glimpse of Taiwan Normal University in Taipei - People's Daily Online". People's Daily. Xinhua. 29 August 2013. Retrieved 26 August 2021.
  31. ^ Miao, Tzung-han; Chang, S.C. (20 July 2017). "Refusing to mention ROC? Respect facts, please: MAC". Focus Taiwan. Retrieved 24 July 2017.

External links Edit

  • Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council (in Chinese)

taiwan, province, people, republic, china, other, uses, taiwan, province, disambiguation, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, b. For other uses see Taiwan Province disambiguation This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Taiwan Province People s Republic of China news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Taiwan Province is a nominal administrative division of the People s Republic of China PRC The PRC constitution defines Taiwan as part of its territories 2 although the PRC has never controlled Taiwan since the PRC s establishment in 1949 3 Taiwan is currently administered by the Republic of China ROC Taiwan 台湾ProvinceName transcription s Chinese台湾省 Taiwan Sheng AbbreviationTW 台 pinyin Tai Hokkien Tai Hakka Thoi Hokkien POJTai oan seng Hakka PFSThoi van sen or Thoi van senMap showing the location of Taiwan ProvinceCoordinates 23 42 N 121 00 E 23 7 N 121 0 E 23 7 121 0Country People s Republic of ChinaEstablished from Fujian1887Cession to Japan17 April 1895Placed under the control of the ROC25 October 1945Claimed as part of PRC1 October 1949CapitalTaipeiLargest cityNew TaipeiDivisionsSee boundary changeGovernment CCP SecretarySee representation GovernorSee representation National People s Congress Representation13 deputiesArea Total35 581 km2 13 738 sq mi Rank28thDemographics Ethnic composition98 Han Chinese2 Gaoshan peopleISO 3166 codeCN TWGDP 2022 estimate 1 CN 5 12 trillion Per capitaCN 219 560HDI 2021 0 916 very highTaiwan Province Taiwan in Traditional top and Simplified bottom Chinese charactersSimplified Chinese台湾省Traditional Chinese臺灣省TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinTaiwan ShengBopomofoㄊㄞˊ ㄨㄢ ㄕㄥˇGwoyeu RomatzyhTair uan SheengWade GilesTʻai wan Sheng Tongyong PinyinTaiwan ShengMPS2Taiwan ShengIPA tʰa ɪ wa n ʂe ŋ HakkaPha k fa sṳThoi van sen orThoi van senYue CantoneseYale RomanizationToihwaan SaangJyutpingToi4waan1 Saang2IPA tʰɔːi waːn saːŋ Southern MinHokkien POJTai oan sengTai loTai uan singEastern MinFuzhou BUCDai uăng sengThe political status of Taiwan is complex Following the Chinese Civil War the PRC considers itself the successor state of the pre 1949 ROC and the sole legitimate government of China since its founding on 1 October 1949 and claims Taiwan and the Penghu Islands as part of its territory under the One China principle However the PRC has never administered Taiwan the Taiwan Area including all of the contemporary Taiwan Province is currently administered by the government of the Republic of China ROC which disputes the PRC s claims The People s Republic of China was founded in 1949 near the end of the Chinese Civil War While by 1950 it had obtained control over most of the territories previously administered by the Republic of China ROC it never gained control of an area made up of Taiwan Instead Taiwan has been administered by the ROC which is now commonly known as Taiwan since the end of World War II in 1945 continuing through the Chinese Civil War and past the foundation of the People s Republic of China in 1949 While the PRC claims Taiwan as part of its territory it recognises Taiwan is outside its actual territory of control and does not maintain a government in exile for Taiwan Province However its CCP National Congress reserves a position for legislators that represent Taiwan most of whom are of Taiwanese descent but were born in and are residents of mainland China except for one representative Lu Li an who was born and grew up in Taiwan The Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council of the People s Republic of China is the part of the PRC government that has responsibility over Taiwan related matters but it is neither tasked with nor presented as a shadow administration for Taiwan Instead the ROC government which actually controls Taiwan Province is referred to by the PRC as the Taiwan authorities 4 In 1979 the PRC proposed that under a hypothetical unification Taiwan would become a Special Administrative Region rather than a province 5 Contents 1 Usage in the People s Republic of China 2 Administrative divisions 3 Politics 3 1 Legislative representation 3 2 Nomenclatures for the ROC government used by PRC 3 2 1 Government bodies 3 2 2 ROC Government officials 3 2 3 Educational institutions 3 2 4 Events 4 Demographics 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksUsage in the People s Republic of China EditDespite formal status of a province the term Taiwan Province is now only used in the most formal circumstances such as National People s Congress citation needed In domestic contexts that excludes Hong Kong and Macau the number of provinces including autonomous regions municipalities is always stated as 31 Taiwan is not counted citation needed In official PRC statistics involving Taiwan Taiwan Area is widely used instead corresponding to the ROC s Free Area of the Republic of China and is treated together with Special Administrative Regions rather than other provinces 6 Taiwan Province only includes Taiwan and associated islands such as the Pescadores Islands but Taiwan Area the same as Taiwan Area as used by ROC a k a is all area administered by Taipei and includes Fujian islands such as Kinmen Matsu as well as at least in principle Pratas Island Tungsha Dongsha part of Cijin District Kaoshiung claimed as part of Guangdong Province by the PRC and Taiping Islands assigned to Kaoshiung by ROC and to Sansha and Hainan by PRC citation needed In 2017 Xinhua News Agency issued guidelines mandating no scare quotes for all members of local governments of Taiwan authorities except Fujian and Lienchiang and preferring the term Taiwan Area over the term Taiwan Province People s Republic of China since the latter does not include the Kinmen and Matsu islands 7 Administrative divisions EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Maps published by the PRC show Taiwan Province and its subdivisions in accordance with its pre 1949 boundaries Until recently the ROC adopted an analogous practice of depicting mainland administrative boundaries in maps the way they were in 1949 to demonstrate that the ROC did not recognise the PRC government or any boundary changes enacted by them since 1949 as legitimate citation needed Even before this the practice of not recognizing any boundary changes made to Taiwan had ended For example New Taipei is accepted instead of Taipei County and the merging of Kaohsiung City and Kaohsiung County is accepted on all maps published by PRC entities Maps published in PRC do not treat borders between Taiwan Province Republic of China and Special Municipalities as provincial borders but county borders and often do not mandate a capital for Taiwan at all The borders between Kinmen and Matsu and rest of Fujian Province are never denoted as provincial borders let alone international citation needed The official databases of PRC do not show any internal divisions of Taiwan all of them showing data not yet available this no longer applies to Hong Kong and Macau citation needed As of 2018 PRC official map service Tianditu treats all six special municipalities as prefecture level cities all three provincial cities as county level cities directly administered by the province and all fourteen county administered cities as subdistricts under each individual county s jurisdiction citation needed Administrative subdivisions Tianditu amp Mapping database 8 Administrative divisions of Taiwan nbsp Taipei New Taipei Keelung Taoyuan HsinchuCounty Hsinchu MiaoliCounty Taichung ChanghuaCounty PenghuCounty NantouCounty YunlinCounty ChiayiCounty Chiayi Tainan Kaohsiung PingtungCounty YilanCounty HualienCounty TaitungCountyROC Units PRC Units DivisionsSpecial municipality 直轄市 Prefecture level city 地级市 6 Kaohsiung New Taipei Taichung Tainan Taipei TaoyuanProvincial city 省轄市 County level city 县级市 Directly administered 直辖 3 Chiayi Hsinchu KeelungCounty 縣 County 县 Directly administered 直辖 11 Changhua County Chiayi County Hsinchu County Hualien County Miaoli County Nantou County Penghu County Pingtung County Taitung County Yilan County Yunlin County Special municipalities District 直轄市 區 District 区 158 divisions Indigenous district 原住民區 Provincial city District 省轄市 區 Subdistrict 街 12 divisions County administered city 縣轄市 14 divisions Urban township 鎮 Town 镇 38 divisions Rural township 鄉 Township 乡 146 divisions Indigenous township 山地鄉Urban village 里 Community 社 5 852 divisions Rural village 村 Village 村 1 850 divisions Neighborhoods 鄰 n aPolitics EditLegislative representation Edit Although Taiwan Province is not under PRC control thirteen delegates are elected to represent Taiwan Province to the National People s Congress citation needed The election of these delegates for Taiwan Province is done in accordance with the Decision from time to time made of the relevant Session of relevant National People s Congress of the PRC on the number of deputies to the National People s Congress and the election of the deputies 9 For example in 2002 that Decision was as follows 9 For the time being 13 deputies representing Taiwan Province shall be elected from among people of Taiwan origin in the other provinces the autonomous regions and the municipalities directly under the Central Government and the Chinese People s Liberation Army Having regard to the relevant Decision the Standing Committee of the National People s Congress adopts a Plan for the Consultative Election of Deputies of Taiwan Province to the National People s Congress The Plan typically provides that the deputies will be elected in Beijing through consultation from among representatives sent by Taiwan compatriots in these provinces autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the Central Government and in the Chinese People s Liberation Army 9 In the case of the 2002 election the Standing Committee noted that there were more than 36 000 Taiwan compatriots in the 31 provinces autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the Central Government and the central Party government and army institutions It was decided that 122 representatives would participate in the conference for election through consultation The number of representatives was allocated on the basis of the geographic distribution of Taiwan compatriots on the mainland and the standing committees of the people s congresses of the provinces autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the Central Government were responsible for making arrangements for the election of the representatives through consultation The Standing Committee s Plan also provided that the election should be conducted in a democratic manner 9 After the latest election at the 13th National People s Congress 13 of the Taiwan representatives for the National People s Congress are 10 Cai Peihui 蔡培輝 Ceng Liqun 曾力群 Chen Jun 陳軍 Amis Chen Yunying 陳雲英 born in Taipei Fu Zhiguan 符之冠 Huang Zhixian 黃志賢 born in Mainland China to a mother from Tainan Liang Zhiqiang 梁志強 born in Mainland China to parents from Miaoli County Liao Haiying 廖海鷹 Lin Qing 林青 born in Taipei Xu Pei 許沛 Zhang Xiaodong 張曉東 Zhang Xiong 張雄 Zou Zhenqiu 鄒振球 Nomenclatures for the ROC government used by PRC Edit See also Government of the Republic of China Since the PRC does not recognise the ROC as legitimate PRC government and media refers to some ROC government offices and institutions using generic description which does not imply endorsement of the ROC s claim to be a legitimate government of either Taiwan or China The precise replacements used are not officially designated so the politically designated names for Taiwan have small variations across different source from within the PRC citation needed Since 21 July 2021 RTHK in Hong Kong has also imposed the same restrictions on its staff to prevent them from implying Taiwan as an independent state 11 For some cases where the name does not significantly imply sovereignty the name remains the same such as for the Mainland Affairs Council 12 county 13 and mayor 14 Government bodies Edit Government as the Taiwan authorities 15 Presidential Office Building as the Taiwan leader s office building 16 Executive Yuan as the executive body 17 Legislative Yuan as the legislative body 18 Ministry of Economic Affairs as the economic affairs authority 19 Ministry of Health and Welfare as the health and welfare authority 20 Ministry of the Interior as the interior authority 17 Ministry of Justice as the justice authority citation needed Ministry of Transportation and Communications as the transportation and communications authority 17 Central Election Commission as the election commission 21 Central Weather Bureau as the weather and earthquake monitoring agency citation needed ROC Government officials Edit President of the Republic of China as the leader of the Taiwan Area 台湾地区领导人 22 Vice President as the deputy leader 副领导人 23 Premier or President of the Executive Yuan as the executive chief 行政机构负责人 24 Minister of Foreign Affairs as the chief official in charge of foreign exchange 25 Minister of Health and Welfare as the chief of health and welfare authority 20 Minister of the Mainland Affairs Council as the mainland affairs chief 26 Minister of National Defense as the military chief 27 Minister of Transportation and Communications as the chief of transportation and communications authority 17 Educational institutions Edit National Taipei University as the Taipei University 28 National Taiwan University as the Taiwan University 29 National Taiwan Normal University as the Taiwan Normal University 30 Events Edit Republic of China Presidential Election as the leadership elections in the Taiwan area 31 Demographics EditMain article Taiwanese indigenous people See also Demographics of Taiwan While demographic data for Taiwan Province published by the PRC government respects the census figures published by the ROC government for the territory the PRC government does not recognise the ethnic classifications of Taiwanese indigenous peoples adopted by the ROC Instead the PRC government classifies all Taiwanese indigenous peoples as Gaoshan people one of the 56 recognized ethnicities of the PRC See also Edit nbsp China portal nbsp Taiwan portalProvinces of China Taiwan Province Republic of China Free Area of the Republic of China Taiwan Affairs Office Political status of TaiwanReferences Edit Report for Selected Countries and Subjects International Monetary Fund Constitution of the People s Republic of China The National People s Congress Retrieved 12 June 2022 Donald S Zagoria 30 October 2003 Breaking the China Taiwan Impasse ABC CLIO pp 68 ISBN 978 0 313 05755 7 OCLC 1058389524 Retrieved 20 March 2022 The fact is that the People s Republic of China PRC while claiming sovereignty over Taiwan has never ruled Taiwan since the PRC s establishment in 1949 The PRC Government website contains numerous references to Taiwan authorities Gov cn Archived from the original on 2014 01 08 Retrieved 2019 04 19 Bush Richard C 2019 01 07 8 key things to notice from Xi Jinping s New Year speech on Taiwan Brookings Retrieved 2019 01 09 截至6月18日24时新型冠状病毒肺炎疫情最新情况 COVID 19 latest situation as of 24 00 June 18 UTC 8 nhc gov cn Retrieved 2020 06 19 靳 倩倩 新华社发布新闻报道禁用词 weixin 广东工业大学大数据战略研究院 Archived from the original on 30 April 2021 Retrieved 4 February 2018 Tianditu Tianditu Retrieved 25 October 2018 a b c d Plan for the Consultative Election of Deputies of Taiwan Province to the Tenth National People s Congress 2002 Government of the PRC website DeAeth Duncan 26 February 2018 Only 2 of 13 deputies for Taiwan in China s Nat People s Congress are from Taiwan Taiwan News Retrieved 26 February 2018 New rules laid down for RTHK over Taiwan stories RTHK Retrieved 21 July 2021 Taiwan s mainland affairs authority congratulates Macao s Chui on reelection Shanghai Daily 2015 06 18 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Lee Teng hui s Diaoyu Islands remarks reprimanded in Taiwan News on Taiwan ENG TAIWAN CN eng taiwan cn 张玲 2014 06 30 Headline Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council PRC Gwytb gov cn Retrieved 2015 07 10 1 Archived 9 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine Truck crashes into Taiwan leader s office building People s Daily Online English peopledaily com cn 2014 01 26 Retrieved 2015 07 10 a b c d Taiwan s executive body to be reshuffled Xinhua English news cn News xinhuanet com 2013 02 01 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Taiwan legislative body reviews no confidence motion chinadaily com cn 2013 10 14 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Headline Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council PRC Gwytb gov cn 2011 01 06 Retrieved 2015 07 10 a b Taiwan s food safety office opens amid scandals Xinhua English news cn News xinhuanet com 2014 10 22 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Candidates register for Taiwan leader election Xinhua English news cn news xinhuanet com Taiwan leader Ma Ying jeou re elected KMT chairman People s Daily Online English peopledaily com cn 2013 07 21 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Taiwan s KMT confirms appointments of four vice chairmen Xinhua English news cn News xinhuanet com 2014 09 14 Retrieved 2015 07 10 20 killed 270 injured in Taiwan gas leak explosions China Daily 1 August 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2021 Jiang Yi huah the island s executive chief Taiwan demands apology from Philippines for fisherman s death Xinhua English news cn News xinhuanet com 2013 05 10 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Mainland s Taiwan affairs chief highlights long waited trip Xinhua English news cn News xinhuanet com 2014 06 25 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Taiwan punishes officers after celebrity s Apache chopper visit News on Taiwan ENG TAIWAN CN eng taiwan cn 张玲 2014 08 11 Headline Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council PRC Gwytb gov cn Retrieved 2015 07 10 Political meeting to promote peaceful development of cross Strait relations Taiwan experts Xinhua English news cn News xinhuanet com 2014 06 15 Retrieved 2015 07 10 A glimpse of Taiwan Normal University in Taipei People s Daily Online People s Daily Xinhua 29 August 2013 Retrieved 26 August 2021 Miao Tzung han Chang S C 20 July 2017 Refusing to mention ROC Respect facts please MAC Focus Taiwan Retrieved 24 July 2017 External links EditTaiwan Affairs Office of the State Council in Chinese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taiwan Province People 27s Republic of China amp oldid 1181253986, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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