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Tour of Sayram Lake cycling race to be held on May 19-25 in Xinjiang

China

China

China

Tour of Sayram Lake cycling race to be held on May 19-25 in Xinjiang

2026-04-20 17:25 Last Updated At:04-21 11:56

The 18th edition of the Tour of Sayram Lake cycling race will be held in Bortala Mongolian Autonomous Prefecture of northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region from May 19 to 25, the local government said at a press conference on Friday.

More than 20 teams and around 600 cyclists are expected to compete at the event, which will cover a total distance of 529 kilometers in six stages.

The event has become the most influential match of its kind in China, and has won the title of "China's high-quality sports tourism event" for seven consecutive years, a local official said at the briefing.

Tour of Sayram Lake cycling race to be held on May 19-25 in Xinjiang

Tour of Sayram Lake cycling race to be held on May 19-25 in Xinjiang

A Chinese mainland spokesperson on Wednesday slammed Taiwan leader Lai Ching-te over his latest remarks on cross-Strait relations, accusing him of promoting secessionism and escalating tensions across the Taiwan Strait.

Chen Binhua, spokesperson for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, said in a press release that Lai's speech marking his second anniversary in office was "filled with lies and deception, hostility and confrontation."

Chen accused Lai of stubbornly adhering to a secessionist stance in pursuit of "Taiwan independence," while exaggerating the so-called threats from the mainland and intensifying confrontation across the Strait.

Lai played an old trick of advocating the secessionist agenda on one hand and, on the other, calling insincerely for dialogue and exchanges with the mainland, attempting to mislead people in Taiwan and deceive the international community, he said.

Chen said that these common tricks have been seen through by more and more Taiwanese people. Their deceptive and provocative actions will be met with firm opposition from compatriots on both sides and the international community, and are doomed to fail.

Reaffirming the mainland's position on the Taiwan question, Chen said Taiwan has never been a country, is not one now, and will never become one in the future.

He described the Taiwan question as a historical issue left over from a Chinese civil war in the 1940s.

No election result in Taiwan could alter the fact that Taiwan is part of China or sever the historical and legal bonds linking the two sides of the Strait, according to Chen.

The mainland would never allow any person or force to pursue secessionist activities under any pretext, he added.

Calling secessionists "the chief culprit" who undermines cross-Strait peace, Chen said the mainland would continue to uphold the one-China principle and the 1992 Consensus, unite broadly with Taiwan compatriots, combat secessionist activities, and safeguard peace and stability across the Strait.

Central government spokesperson refutes Lai Ching-te's latest remarks, warns against secessionist moves

Central government spokesperson refutes Lai Ching-te's latest remarks, warns against secessionist moves

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