Taiwan’s ‘Mr Democracy’ Lee Teng-Hui Dies Aged 97 in Taipei

Taiwan’s ‘Mr Democracy’ Lee Teng-Hui Dies Aged 97 in Taipei
Former Taiwan President Lee Teng-hui speaks during a news conference in Tokyo, Japan, on June 1, 2007. Yuriko Nakao/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

TAIPEI—Former Taiwan President Lee Teng-hui, dubbed “Mr. Democracy” for burying autocratic rule in favor of freewheeling pluralism, died at the age of 97, the official Central News Agency reported on Thursday.

Lee became Taiwan’s first democratically elected president in 1996, in a landslide victory that followed eight months of intimidating war games and missile tests by mainland China in waters around Taiwan in an attempt to scare voters.

He thrived on defying China’s drive to absorb the island it regards as a wayward province and hoped for Taiwan to be “a country of democracy, freedom, human rights and dignity.”

By Yimou Lee