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Taiwan faces rising China threat despite warmer ties: report

Taiwan police end post-typhoon car crime spree
Taipei (AFP) Oct 5, 2010 - Taiwanese police said Tuesday they had arrested three car thieves who amassed nearly half a million US dollars from selling stolen spare parts after a typhoon damaged many vehicles. The trio stole one or two cars daily and harvested their parts to keep up with demand after Typhoon Fanapi struck the island last month, causing flood damage to a large number of vehicles, Taipei county police said. They had pocketed at least 15 million Taiwan dollars (476,000 US) by selling the parts to garages, before police tracked them down via the GPS system in one of the stolen cars, police said. Fanapi, the strongest typhoon to hit the region this year, left two people dead and 100 others injured in Taiwan. It went on to kill at least 100 in mainland China.
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) Oct 5, 2010
Taiwan's vice defence minister warned that China represented an increasing threat to the island's security despite improving ties between the former bitter rivals, Taipei-based media reported Tuesday.

Andrew Yang, currently visiting the United States, was quoted as saying that there was no sign that China had been relaxing its military deployment against Taiwan regardless of a warmer relationship between the two sides.

"The security threat we face is not falling, but actually growing," he was quoted by the state Central News Agency as saying in a speech to a Taiwan-US defence conference in Maryland.

Yang was referring to comments by Chinese defence minister Liang Guanglie that the mainland's military buildup retains its focus on Taiwan, it said.

Ties have improved markedly after Beijing-friendly Ma Ying-jeou became Taiwan's president in 2008, but China still refuses to renounce the possibility of using force should the island declare independence.

Yang again urged Washington to sell F-16 fighter jets and diesel submarines to the island to help maintain the balance in the Taiwan Strait, the report said.

Taiwan has repeatedly pressed the US for the sale of F-16C/Ds, saying sufficient weapons would make the island more confident in dealing with Beijing.

Washington early this year announced a weapons package for Taiwan that includes Patriot missiles, Black Hawk helicopters, and equipment for Taiwan's F-16 fleet, but no submarines or new fighter aircraft.

Analysts have said they doubt Washington would risk angering Beijing by approving more sensitive items like F-16 C/Ds and submarines.



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