Mainland says Taiwan remarks on census 'distorting facts'
BEIJING -- A mainland spokesperson Monday refuted remarks from Taiwan on an upcoming population census on the mainland as an act of "fact-distorting" born from a desire to undermine cross-Straits ties.
The statement by Zhu Fenglian, a spokesperson for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, came in response to Taiwan media reports that mainlanders with Taiwan spouses are required to provide data on their Taiwan-based family for the census, and ensuing comments by Taiwan's mainland affairs authority that called it an infringement on personal privacy.
In accordance with relevant laws and regulations, Zhu said, the State Council has decided to carry out the seventh population census in 2020, which is scheduled to take place at 12 am on Nov 1.
Taiwan people residing on the mainland fall within the scope of the census, while Taiwan people living outside of the mainland do not, she said.
- China ranks among the top globally in the number of active AI patents: official
- High-speed train hub eases journeys
- Macao university, medical center hold symposium for further cooperation
- Senior Chinese official urges sustained crackdown on cross-border gambling
- Xi signs order to promulgate regulations on military theory work
- China achieves breakthrough in extracting lithium from salt lakes































