Last modified: 2009-08-08 by phil nelson
Keywords: taiwan | political parties |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
The major Pan-China parties:
The latter two are factions of the Kuomintang split during the Lee Teng Hui era.
Pro-Independence Parties:
In the AOL news today, there were pictures taken of a rally in Taipei where
over 100,000 persons demanded a name change from REPUBLIC OF CHINA to TAIWAN.
They were carrying a huge flag with them.
Dean Thomas. 6 September 2003
This can not be a Taiwanese (proposed) national flag. It's a political rally
banner for foreign press pictures. Unless the Taiwanese would change
also the national language to English.
Francisco Santos, 6 September 2003
Taken from a photography published in the 21/09/2003 issue of YZZK
magazine. It shows a groups of people demonstrating in Taiwan while flying
2 types of flags: the first is a green-white-green pale.
Marc Pasquin, 14 April 2005
Judging by the AP photos posted to flagforum.skalman.nu
it appears the emblem outline of Taiwan rather than the emblem illustrated.
Marcus Wendel, 8 September 2008
Except for the central design (a green triangle over a green disc) and the presence of Chinese characters over it (I'd guess they might simply say "taiwan republic" as the text in latin script at the bottom). Incidently, you can see someone holding in his/her hand a small version of it so it is a flag, not a banner.
The fact that they have retained the same colours (and in the same order)
from the previously reported one means that there probably is some symbolism
to it. Maybe something relating the Taiwan Independence
Party.
Marc Pasquin, 14 April 2005
Detail
contributed by Jorge Candeias
This a picture of a very happy Taiwanese citizen, waving a flag off the roof of his car. It illustrated an article on the victory of Chen Shui-bian in the March 2004 elections, and I strongly suspect that this is a short-lived campaign flag. See detail for the amount of writing it includes and the number 1, which is an electoral code.
This is interesting because here whenever presidential elections are held, we also see lots of flags, but never flags that include the picture of the candidate, much less his wife (supposing that that's who the woman is). Flags here include flags with the campaign slogans and logos, of the parties and organizations that endorse the candidacies, the national flag also pops up every once and a while, other flags are also seen on occasion, but photos never appear.
And it's also interesting because this topic of campaign flags is very
poorly studied, probably due to the extreme brevity in each of these flag's
life.
Jorge Candeias, 8 November 2004
The woman is Madam Vice President, Annette Lui
Miles Li, 9 November 2004