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・ Chinese Taipei at the 1998 Asian Games
・ Chinese Taipei at the 1998 Winter Olympics
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2000 Summer Olympics
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・ Chinese Taipei at the 2004 Summer Paralympics
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・ Chinese Taipei at the 2006 Winter Olympics
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・ Chinese Taipei at the 2008 Summer Olympics
Chinese Taipei at the 2008 Summer Paralympics
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2009 Asian Indoor Games
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2009 East Asian Games
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2010 Asian Beach Games
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2010 Asian Games
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2010 Asian Para Games
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2010 Winter Olympics
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2011 Asian Winter Games
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2011 Summer Universiade
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2011 UCI Road World Championships
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2011 World Aquatics Championships
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics
・ Chinese Taipei at the 2012 Summer Olympics


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Chinese Taipei at the 2008 Summer Paralympics : ウィキペディア英語版
Chinese Taipei at the 2008 Summer Paralympics

Chinese Taipei competed at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing, China. The delegation consisted of seventeen competitors in six sports: archery, track and field athletics, powerlifting, shooting, swimming, and table tennis. The athletes were ten men and seven women ranging in age from 27 to 53 years old.
"Chinese Taipei" is the delegation name used since 1979 by athletes from Taiwan and the Taiwan Area at the Olympic and Paralympic Games.〔("Reinstatement in the Olympic Movement" ), Chinese Olympic Committee, March 27, 2004〕 Thus, Chinese Taipei's participation in the Beijing Paralympics did not contradict the One China policy and was not objected to by the People's Republic of China.
As in previous editions of the Summer Paralympics, the flag of the Republic of China was not displayed. Instead, the Chinese Taipei Paralympic flag was used when Taiwanese athletes won medals. When Lin Tzu-hui of Chinese Taipei won a gold medal, the National Banner Song, not the National Anthem of the Republic of China, was played at the medal ceremony.〔("Taiwan shut out of Olympic warm-up" ), ''Taipei Times'', February 22, 2008〕
Three days before the beginning of the Games, the ''Taipei Times'' reported that two of Chinese Taipei's star athletes, double Paralympic champion Chiang Chih-chung and world athletics champion Chen Ming-tsai, had been barred from attending by the International Paralympic Committee. The ''Times'' added that no reason had been given for the ban, even after the Chinese Taipei Paralympic Committee had requested an explanation from the IPC. A representative of the CTPC stated that the People's Republic of China may have "interfered for political reasons" to prevent Chiang and Chen from participating in the Games.〔("Local javelin ace banned from Beijing Paralympics" ), ''Taipei Times'', September 3, 2008〕 The ''Taipei Times'' article was subsequently reproduced on the Taiwanese government's website.〔(taiwanheadlines.gov.tw )〕
==Medallists==

Chinese Taipei won two medals, a gold and a bronze.〔("Overall Medal Standings" ), official website of the Beijing Paralympics〕

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