#sino-japanese peace treaty

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Treaty of Peace between the Republic of China and Japan: Q&A Collection

This article compiles the Q&A report on the 'Treaty of Peace between the Republic of China and Japan' (Treaty of Taipei) released by the ROC Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2012. It thoroughly explains the background, core content, and impact on Taiwan's sovereign status, refuting common legal misunderstandings and the 'Taiwan status undetermined' arguments regarding the treaty.

DPP's Claim About Renouncing Reparations in the Sino-Japanese Peace Treaty: Misunderstanding the Green Government's Inability to Advocate for Comfort Women

This article harshly criticizes statements made by DPP Taipei Councilor Wang Shih-chien on a political talk show, refuting his claim that 'Chiang Kai-shek renounced demands for reparations from Japan in the Sino-Japanese Peace Treaty, preventing the government from seeking compensation for Taiwanese comfort women.' The author argues this is an 'erroneous misunderstanding,' rebutting from two angles: first, Japan unilaterally breached the treaty; second, the treaty content didn't actually renounce comfort women compensation rights.

Treaty of Peace Between the Republic of China and Japan (Treaty of Taipei)

A comprehensive record of the Treaty of Taipei (1952), including excerpts of key articles and diplomatic exchanges. This document clarifies the legal termination of the state of war between the Republic of China (R.O.C.) and Japan, confirming Japan's renunciation of rights over Taiwan and Penghu, and the historical context of its unilateral termination by Japan in 1972.

Q&A on 'Taiwan's Sovereignty is Undetermined': Defending Taiwan's Legal Status Under International Law

This article uses Q&A format to analyze and refute the theory that 'Taiwan's sovereignty is undetermined.' It cites the Cairo Declaration, the Sino-Japanese Peace Treaty, and authoritative international law scholars to argue that the ROC government's sovereignty over Taiwan and Penghu is firmly based in international law, not merely military occupation.