Taiwanese police today arrested 13 people who splashed red paint on the wall of the presidential residence in the latest protest against China's planned launch of a controversial new flight route.
The protesters from the small anti-China opposition party Taiwan Solidarity Union briefly scuffled with military police guarding the residence of President Ma Ying-jeou in Taipei in the early morning.
The demonstration came ahead of the scheduled launch of the route known as M503 over the Taiwan Strait on Sunday.
M503 is one of four routes which would take planes over the Taiwan Strait from China's coastal province of Zhejiang and the cities of Fuzhou and Xiamen in Fujian province.
Beijing says they are necessary to ease congestion on an existing flightpath.
But Taiwan's authorities have slammed the unilateral move and said it poses a potential air defence threat.
Earlier this week, protesters clashed with police as they tried to enter government buildings in two demonstrations in a row ahead of the scheduled launch.
The protesters arrested today were later released after questioning. Each was fined Tw$6,000 ($193) for violating a waste disposal law.
Eight protesters also faced charges of interfering with public functions over the clash, a police officer said.
"Ma Ying-jeou sells out Taiwan," one protester shouted in footage aired by local television.
Ma's office issued a statement condemning violence. "Taiwan is a society with the rule of law. Any political appeal should base on the rule of law and should not cross the boundary of peace," it said.
The route was originally due to be launched on March 5, but was postponed due to those objections.
China later slightly modified the M503 route but is pressing ahead with the launch.
The other three routes have been indefinitely postponed, according to Taiwan's Civil Aeronautics Administration.
The government has said that negotiations with China over the routes will help safeguard the island's aviation security. It has also said that Chinese fighter jets would not use M503.
China considers self-ruled Taiwan a part of its territory awaiting reunification, by force if necessary. They split in 1949 at the end of a civil war.
Ties have improved markedly since Ma came to power in 2008 on a China-friendly platform, but some fear Taiwan is becoming over-dependent on the mainland.
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