Taiwan president arrives in Hawaii despite Chinese objections

Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen, on transit enroute to Pacific island allies, leaves the USS Arizona Memorial after touring the park at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. (Reuters)
Updated 29 October 2017
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Taiwan president arrives in Hawaii despite Chinese objections

HONOLULU: Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen landed in Honolulu on Saturday en route to the island’s diplomatic allies among Pacific nations and set off for a visit to a Pearl Harbor memorial, despite strong objections to the visit from China.
China regards self-ruled Taiwan as sovereign territory and regularly calls it the most sensitive and important issue between it and the US, complaining to Washington about transit stops by Taiwanese presidents.
China has not renounced the possible use of force to bring the island under its control.
Tsai, who China believes is seeking formal independence for Taiwan, left on Saturday on a week-long trip to three Pacific island allies — Tuvalu, the Solomon Islands and the Marshall Islands — via Honolulu and the US territory of Guam.
For her part, Tsai says she wants to maintain peace with China but will defend Taiwan’s democracy and security.
Earlier this week, the US State Department said Tsai’s transits through US soil would be “private and unofficial” and were based on long-standing US practice consistent with “our unofficial relations with Taiwan.”
It noted there was “no change to the US one-China policy” which recognizes that Beijing takes the view that there is only one China, and Taiwan is part of it.
Tsai, accompanied by her entourage and members of the media, left on a short boat ride for the USS Arizona Memorial, which is built over the remains of the battleship sunk in Pearl Harbor in the Second World War, on Saturday afternoon.
The memorial, where Tsai was expected to lay a wreath, now forms a centerpiece of the World War Two Valor in the Pacific National Monument, a site administered by the National Park Service.
US President Donald Trump is due to visit China in less than two weeks. He angered Beijing last December by taking a telephone call from Tsai shortly after he won the presidential election.
The trip to the United States is Tsai’s second this year. In January she stopped over in Houston and San Francisco on her way to and from Latin America, visiting the headquarters of Twitter , which is blocked in China.
China has claimed sovereignty over Taiwan since 1949, when Mao Zedong’s Communist forces won the Chinese civil war and Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists fled to the island.


Women suicide bombers, new weapons give boost to insurgents in Pakistan

Updated 5 sec ago
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Women suicide bombers, new weapons give boost to insurgents in Pakistan

  • Insurgents put images of women adherents on social media
  • Women recruits ‌fuel group’s propaganda, analysts say
ISLAMABAD: Wearing military fatigues with rifles slung over their shoulders, Yasma Baloch and her husband Waseem smile into the camera for a picture released by Pakistani insurgents after their final mission: detonating suicide bombs.
“They shared a marriage before they shared a final stand,” the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) said in a statement accompanying the heavily-edited photograph sent to journalists and distributed on social media.
It was among half-a-dozen pictures and biographies that Reuters was unable to immediately verify, but which analysts see as part of a propaganda effort by insurgents in the resource-rich southwestern province to showcase their movement’s appeal.
Insurgent attacks in Pakistan’s largest yet poorest province hit a record last year, fanning risks to huge investments planned in the region, including Chinese and US interests.
Wider ethnic appeal
The growing numbers of women help to boost recruitment, said junior interior minister Talal Chaudhry, in the insurgents’ decades-long battle for greater autonomy and a bigger share of regional resources and critical minerals.
“It gives them popularity and reach, and it impresses on their community that the fight has entered their homes,” Chaudhry told Reuters.
Pakistan has taken up the issue of insurgent recruitment online with numerous social media platforms, ‌he added.
A spokesperson ‌for the BLA did not respond to a request for comment.
Three suicide bombers were among six ‌women ⁠who participated in the ⁠group’s largest wave of attacks in January that killed 58 and nearly brought the province to a standstill, said Hamza Shafaat, a top government official.
Before those attacks, records show a total of five women BLA suicide bombers, including the first such attack in 2022, while three more would-be bombers were captured in counter-terrorism operations in the last some months.
While authorities know of only a small number of women who have joined the ranks of the BLA, analysts say the recruitments point to the group’s widening appeal among ethnic Baloch residents.
“The … insurgency’s broader appeal … has now gone beyond male-dominated tribal and feudal chiefs to include a wider cross-section of society,” said Pearl Pandya, a senior South Asia analyst at conflict monitor ACLED.
‘Most lethal insurgent group’
The participation of women amplifies a ⁠movement that Pakistan’s military says has boosted its firepower with access to a massive cache of US weapons ‌left behind in Afghanistan after Washington pulled out of the neighboring country in 2021.
“In South ‌Asia today, the BLA is the most organized and lethal insurgent group,” said Abdul Basit, a researcher in insurgencies and militancy at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.
He ‌cited the group’s use of drones to identify troop deployments and vulnerabilities, adding that it used satellite communication during a February 2025 hijack ‌of a train with more than 400 aboard.
Pakistan recovered 272 US made rifles and 33 night vision devices by June last year, its military says, apart from the weapons seized in the most recent Balochistan attacks.
The armed forces “keep on seeing these weapons in the hands of the terrorists operating inside Pakistan,” their spokesperson, Lt. General Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, told Reuters before January’s attacks.
The Pentagon did not respond to a request for comment.
In reply to a request for comment, White House ‌spokeswoman Anna Kelly said, “As President Trump has said, Joe Biden’s botched Afghanistan withdrawal was the most embarrassing day in our country’s history, which tragically resulted in the deaths of 13 US service members and lost ⁠equipment to the Taliban.”
She added, “We do ⁠not discuss private conversations with foreign governments.”
During more than a dozen coordinated attacks in January, the insurgents stormed hospitals, government buildings, and markets, set off bombs and fired into crowds, killing 58 civilians and security officials.
‘Dangerous evolution in tactics’
Afterwards, from the 216 militants that security forces said were killed in nearly a week of fighting, they seized items ranging from grenade launchers to more than a dozen M16 and M4 rifles.
Reuters was unable to verify whether the sophisticated weapons used in the BLA attacks were made in the United States or came from elsewhere.
Among the $7 billion worth of equipment left in Afghanistan, the US defense department has said, Afghan forces had received more than 300,000 of a total of 427,300 weapons.
That was in addition to more than 42,000 items such as night vision goggles and surveillance devices, it said.
And the insurgents hope propaganda about women recruits will boost their impact.
“They are using women strategically in high-profile attacks for visibility,” Basit added.
The women hail from various socio-economic backgrounds, with some having university education, Pakistan’s counter terrorism department said in a December report seen by Reuters.
“The shift represents a dangerous evolution in terrorist tactics,” it said, about women’s growing participation.
The change was driven by psychological manipulation, online radicalization and strategic exploitation of vulnerable individuals, it added.
“The insurgency’s foot soldiers and leaders both now come from the middle class,” said Pandya, the ACLED analyst.