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Home The News News IOC asks Taiwan for clarification of name change referendum procedures

IOC asks Taiwan for clarification of name change referendum procedures


Members of the Social Democratic Party clarify their preferences for the Nov. 24 referendums at a news conference in Taipei on Wednesday. Several signs read “We are called Taiwan.”
Photo courtesy of the Social Democratic Party

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) in a letter to the Chinese Taipei Olympic Committee (CTOC) asked for information about Taiwanese referendum procedures ahead of a plebiscite on whether the nation should request to compete in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics as “Taiwan” instead of “Chinese Taipei,” the national Olympic committee said on Wednesday.

Citing a report by Spanish news agency EFE on the name-change referendum, the IOC asked about voting procedures, but did not mention whether the referendum might affect Taiwan’s right to participate in the 2020 Games, CTOC secretary-general Shen Yi-ting (沈依婷) said in response to questions from local media.

Ten referendums are to be held alongside the Nov. 24 nine-in-one elections, including one that asks voters whether they agree that Taiwan should apply to participate in all international sporting events, including the Tokyo Olympics, using the name “Taiwan.”

For a referendum to pass, it must gain a majority of votes, with “yes” votes exceeding 25 percent of the number of eligible voters.

Central Election Commission Chairman Chen In-chin (陳英鈐) has estimated the number of eligible voters this year at 19.8 million, which means that at least 4.95 million “yes” votes would be required for a referendum to pass.

In a May letter to the CTOC, the IOC said that the name “Chinese Taipei” cannot be changed, because it was determined by an agreement between the two committees in Lausanne, Switzerland, in 1981.

The Lausanne agreement states that Taiwan must use the name “Chinese Taipei” and fly the CTOC flag at international sports events, an arrangement that has allowed Taiwanese athletes to continue to compete internationally after the People’s Republic of China replaced the Republic of China as China’s representative at the UN in 1971.

The Sports Administration yesterday said it would respect the national Olympic committee’s decisions and the timetable it set for the proposed name change.

Considering that the CTOC is a non-governmental organization, it should be granted full autonomy, Sports Administration International and Cross-Strait Sports Division deputy head Yang Chu-yu (楊莒妤) said.


Source: Taipei Times - 2018/11/02



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Newsflash

Hundreds of university students voiced their disappointment and anger over President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) continued silence over their anti-media monopoly appeal following an overnight vigil yesterday and vowed to keep on pressing the president for a response and action on an issue that risks undermining freedom of speech in the nation.

The students launched the protest on 7pm on Monday at Liberty Square, followed by a sit-in protest starting at 4am yesterday on Ketagalan Boulevard, right outside the restricted area for the New Year’s Day flag-raising ceremony. They demanded that the president clarify his position on the controversial Next Media Group (壹傳媒集團) deal and address related issues on media monopoly and Chinese influence over Taiwan’s media.