Taipei: Taiwan plans to issue new passports emphasizing its independent identity and downgrading connections with China.
Taiwan was handed over from Japanese to Chinese rule in 1945. Four years later, Chiang Kai-shek relocated the Republic of China and its institutions to the island as Mao Zedong's Communist Party swept to power on the mainland in the Chinese Civil War.
Taiwan has since shrugged off political connections with China as part of its transition to full democracy. However, it has retained Republic of China as its official name, along with the constitution, flag and state institutions brought from China.
Read also:Defying China's wrath, Czech senator delivers Taiwan speech
Despite the political divide, China continues to claim Taiwan as its own territory and has required foreign countries and multinational companies to refer to the island as a part of China.
Asked about the passport change at a daily briefing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said that the fact that Taiwan is an inalienable part of China will never change regardless of what "tricks" are played by the governing pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party.