Tsai Ing-wen elected Taiwan's first female president
Tsai Ing-wen has been elected Taiwan's first female president.
Ms Tsai, 59, leads the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) that wants independence from China.
In
her victory speech, she vowed to preserve the status quo in relations
with China, adding Beijing must respect Taiwan's democracy and both
sides must ensure there are no provocations.
In her speech, Ms Tsai hailed a "new era" in Taiwan and pledged to co-operate with other political parties on major issues.
The will of the Taiwanese people would be the basis for relations with China, Ms Tsai said.
"I
also want to emphasise that both sides of the Taiwanese Strait have a
responsibility to find mutually acceptable means of interaction that are
based on dignity and reciprocity.
"We must ensure that no
provocations or accidents take place," Ms Tsai said, warning that "any
forms of suppression will harm the stability of cross-strait relations".
She thanked the US and Japan for their support and vowed Taiwan would contribute to peace and stability in the region.
Ms Tsai had a commanding lead in the vote count when Eric Chu of the ruling Kuomintang (KMT) admitted defeat.
Mr Chu congratulated Tsai Ing-wen and announced he was quitting as KMT head. Taiwan's Premier Mao Chi-kuo also resigned.
Read more about Taiwan's election
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 - Ms Tsai's 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 with China escalated.
Analysis: Cindy Sui, BBC News, Taipei
The election result marks a turning point in Taiwan's democracy and relationship with China.
The
DPP win means the island is moving towards a political system in which
voters prefer to transfer power from one party to another, ending
decades of mostly KMT rule.
That could make relations with China
uncertain, because unlike the KMT, the DPP favours Taiwan's independence
and does not recognise the Republic of China (Taiwan's official name)
and the People's Republic of China as part of "one China".
The KMT
was the Communists' bitter enemy during the civil war. It fled to
Taiwan after losing the civil war and its charter and leaders still
favour eventual unification. It remains China's best hope - and perhaps
only hope - of peacefully reunifying with Taiwan
Beijing has been
closely watching the elections to gauge Taiwanese people's sentiments
and what those sentiments will mean for its goal of reunifying with the
last inhabited territory - following Hong Kong and Macau - that it feels
was unfairly snatched from it by Japan as a colony in 1895, and then
ruled separately by the KMT after the civil war.
Ms Tsai, a former scholar, has said she wants to "maintain [the] status quo" with China.
She became chairwoman of the DPP in 2008, after it saw a string of corruption scandals.
She
lost a presidential bid in 2012 but has subsequently led the party to
regional election victories. She has won increased support from the
public partly because of widespread dissatisfaction over the KMT and
President Ma Ying-jeou's handling of the economy and widening wealth
gap.
Saturday's polls come after a historic meeting
between President Ma and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Singapore in
November for talks that were seen as largely symbolic - the first in
more than 60 years.
Eric Chu, 54, is the mayor of New Taipei City and stepped up to become chairman of the party in October.
The KMT is at risk of losing its majority in the legislature for the first time in history.
The
former accounting professor was seen as popular with young people in
the party, but had been unable to change public opinion that is
increasingly unhappy with the party's friendly stance towards China and
the island's economic travails.
In 2014, hundreds of students
occupied the parliament in the largest show of anti-Chinese sentiment on
the island for years. Labelled the Sunflower Movement, protesters
demanded more transparency in trade pacts negotiated with China.
Taiwan
for all practical purposes been independent since the end of the
Chinese civil war in 1949, when the defeated Nationalist government fled
to the island as the Communists, under Mao Zedong, swept to power.
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