World

Taiwan elects first female president

Tsai is a former scholar who has not made her stance on China clear. Photo: BBC

Opposition candidate Tsai Ing-wen has been elected Taiwan's first female president.

Tsai's election is a major victory for Taiwan's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) which leads the camp that wants independence from China.

She had a commanding lead in the vote count when Eric Chu of the ruling Kuomintang (KMT) admitted defeat.

China sees the island as a breakaway province - which it has threatened to take back by force if necessary.

As results showed the KMT candidate trailing with about 30% of the vote, Chu congratulated Tsai Ing-wen and announced he was quitting as KMT head.

The election came just months after a historic meeting between the leaders of Taiwan and China.

However, the flagging economy as well as Taiwan's relationship with China both played a role in the voters' choice, correspondents say.

The KMT has been in power for most of the past 70 years and has overseen improved relations with Beijing - Tsai's victory means this is only the second-ever victory for the DPP.

The first was by pro-independence advocate Chen Shui-bian - during his time as president between 2000 and 2008 tensions escalated with China.

Tsai, however, has not made her stance clear. A former scholar, she has said she wants to "maintain [the] status quo" with China.

But opponents say relations will deteriorate as she does not recognise the "one China" policy. She became chairwoman of the DPP in 2008, after it saw a string of corruption scandals.

Comments

২ বছরে দেশে সর্বোচ্চ বিদেশি বিনিয়োগ জানুয়ারি-মার্চে

বাংলাদেশ ব্যাংকের তথ্যে জানা যায়—চলতি বছরের প্রথম প্রান্তিকে সরাসরি বিদেশি বিনিয়োগ (এফডিআই) বেড়ে হয়েছে এক দশমিক ৫৮ বিলিয়ন ডলার। এর মধ্যে ৭১১ মিলিয়ন ডলার পুনর্বিনিয়োগ করা হয়েছে। বাকি ৮৬৫ মিলিয়ন...

৩৮ মিনিট আগে