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Adding 8 Taiwan entities to export control list justified, necessary: spokesman

China

Adding 8 Taiwan entities to export control list justified, necessary: spokesman
China

China

Adding 8 Taiwan entities to export control list justified, necessary: spokesman

2025-07-16 16:33 Last Updated At:23:37

The Ministry of Commerce's decision of adding eight entities from China's Taiwan region to the dual-use export control list is a just action, said Chen Binhua, spokesman for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, on Wednesday, emphasizing that the move is justified, lawful, legitimate, and necessary.

Last week, the Ministry of Commerce announced the inclusion of eight Taiwanese entities on the export control list.

These companies have deliberately cooperated with the Taiwan separatist forces, a spokesperson for the ministry said in a statement.

"Who is engaging in reckless separatist provocations that undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait? Who is going against the mainstream public opinion in Taiwan by obstructing and restricting cross-Strait exchanges and cooperation? And who is blindly obedient to the United States, betraying Taiwan for self-interest, while recklessly pursuing decoupling and disruption of industrial and supply chains to damage cross-Strait economic and trade cooperation? Compatriots on both sides of the Strait see this clearly, and the Democratic Progressive Party authorities can't deny it," said Chen at a press conference.

"The eight entities in Taiwan, including Aerospace Industrial Development Corporation, have deliberately cooperated with Taiwan secessionist forces in seeking secession by force. The facts are clear and the evidence conclusive. Including them on the export control list is a necessary measure to safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity, and to maintain cross-Strait peace and stability. It is a just action to uphold the normal order of cross-Strait economic and trade exchanges and cooperation, as well as to protect the interests and well-being of compatriots on both sides of the Taiwan Strait. The action is justified, lawful, legitimate, and necessary," he said.

Adding 8 Taiwan entities to export control list justified, necessary: spokesman

Adding 8 Taiwan entities to export control list justified, necessary: spokesman

Adding 8 Taiwan entities to export control list justified, necessary: spokesman

Adding 8 Taiwan entities to export control list justified, necessary: spokesman

Adding 8 Taiwan entities to export control list justified, necessary: spokesman

Adding 8 Taiwan entities to export control list justified, necessary: spokesman

International guests who have dedicated their lives to historical truth joined China's 12th national memorial event honoring the hundreds of thousands of victims killed by Japanese troops in the Nanjing Massacre during World War II.

The memorial was held on Saturday at the public square of the Memorial Hall of the Victims in Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders in Nanjing, capital of east China's Jiangsu Province. China's national flag was flown at half-mast in the presence the crowd that included survivors of the massacre, local students, and international guests.

In one of the most barbaric episodes during WWII, the Nanjing Massacre took place when Japanese troops captured the then-Chinese capital Nanjing on Dec 13, 1937. Over the course of six weeks, they proceeded to kill approximately 300,000 Chinese civilians and unarmed soldiers.

Joining the crowd was Christoph Reinhardt, the great-grandson of John Rabe (1882-1950) who was then a representative of German conglomerate Siemens in the war-ravaged Nanjing. During the Nanjing Massacre, Rabe set up an international safety zone with other foreigners, and they together saved the lives of around 250,000 Chinese people between 1937 and 1938 from the Japanese invaders.

Throughout the massacre, Rabe continued to keep a diary. To this day, all his pages remain one of the most comprehensive historical records of the atrocities committed by the Japanese aggressors.

Sayoko Yamauchi, who was also in the crowd of mourners, arrived in Nanjing on Friday from Japan's Osaka to attend Saturday's ceremony, just as she has done almost every year since China designated Dec 13 as the National Memorial Day for the Victims of the Nanjing Massacre in 2014.

Yamauchi's grandfather was one of the Japanese soldiers who invaded Nanjing in January 1938. However, since first setting foot in Nanjing in 1987, she has dedicated herself to uncovering and spreading the truth about Japan's history of aggression and enlightening the Japanese public about their country's wartime atrocities.

In 2014, ahead of China's first National Memorial Day for the Victims of the Nanjing Massacre, Yamauchi, along with 10 other individuals, received an award for her special contribution to the Memorial Hall of the Victims in the Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders.

By attending the grand memorial event, Reinhardt and Yamauchi both said they hope to convey a message of remembering history and cherishing peace.

"This is my fifth visit to China, and Nanjing, and the third times I visited the ceremony. I have a wish that these survivors survive again and again and again. But my other wish is that the families of the survivors, that they transport the information, the right intention like their ancestors, because anyone must hold a hand (during) this remembering," Reinhardt told China Central Television (CCTV) in an interview before the event began on Saturday.

"Our delegation is on its 20th visit to China, coming to Nanjing to express our heartfelt condolences to those who perished 88 years ago, to remember this history, and to reflect on what we can do for a new future. That's why we are here," Yamauchi told CCTV on board the bus that took her to a local hotel in Nanjing on Friday evening.

Int'l guests call for remembering history at China's national event honoring Nanjing Massacre victims

Int'l guests call for remembering history at China's national event honoring Nanjing Massacre victims

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