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The billionaire CEO of Apple supplier Foxconn says he 'will follow the instruction' of a sea goddess who told him to run for president of Taiwan

Alexandra Ma   

The billionaire CEO of Apple supplier Foxconn says he 'will follow the instruction' of a sea goddess who told him to run for president of Taiwan

Foxconn CEO Terry Gou

Getty Images News

Foxconn CEO Terry Gou is running to be Taiwan's president.

  • Foxconn founder and CEO Terry Gou announced his bid for the Taiwanese presidency on Wednesday.
  • He said he was running in the 2020 election because a sea goddess named Mazu told him to "step up" for the people of Taiwan.
  • The Taiwanese presidential elections come as the island's relationship with Beijing becomes increasingly fraught. Taiwan considers itself independent, while China considers it part of its territory.
  • Critics say a Gou presidency could jeopardize Taiwan's calls for independence because Gou is close to China.
  • Visit BusinessInsider.com for more stories.

The billionaire founder and CEO of Foxconn, the Taiwanese electronics supplier, is running for his country's presidency because he said a sea goddess told him to do so.

68-year-old Terry Gou announced on Wednesday he will take part in the Kuomintang party's upcoming primary elections. If he advances in the primaries, he will take part in the self-governing island's 2020 presidential race.

Gou said he was encouraged to run under the instruction and blessing of Mazu (or Matsu), a popular Taoist and Buddhist figure who is regarded as the patron of the seas.

"I tell you, I am like a godson of Mazu, she thinks of me like a godson," Gou told supporters at a temple in Taipei on Wednesday.

He added that she told him: "Now you have to step up and make even more efforts for all the Mazu temples and all people of Taiwan."

"I will definitely respect and follow Mazu's will," he said.

Foxconn is currently the world's biggest contract manufacturer for consumer electronics, and is a key supplier for Apple iPhones. Gou has a net worth of $7.6 billion and is the richest person in Taiwan, according to Forbes.

Read more: Inside 'iPhone City,' the massive Chinese factory town where half of the world's iPhones are produced

AppleFactoryiPhone Foxconn China (4 of 44)

Harrison Jacobs/Business Insider

Workers in a Foxconn factory known as "iPhone City" in Zhengzhou, China.

Taiwan's presidential elections come as the island's tensions with Beijing continue to mount. Taiwan has considered itself independent for the past seven decades, while the central Chinese government considers the island part of its territory.

Beijing has increased its pressure on making Taiwan a subject of China since Tsai Ing-wen, a pro-independence politician, became president in 2016. Tsai's domestic popularity has floundered over the past few months.

China has waged a widespread international campaign to quash Taiwan's calls for independence. Dozens of countries, airlines, and businesses have distanced themselves from Taiwan in recent years

Read more: China is waging war against a cafe because it served coffee to Taiwan's president

taiwan china tsai ing wen xi jinping

Ashley Pon/Getty; Fred Dufour/Getty

A composite image of Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen and Chinese President Xi Jinping. China has waged a widespread international campaign to quash Taiwan's calls for independence.

Experts worry that a Gou presidency would jeopardize Taiwan's bid for independence.

Gou has spoken in favor of closer ties with China, where most of Foxconn's factories are located.

Yao Chia-wen, a senior adviser to Tsai, even told Reuters that Gou's candidacy "is problematic to Taiwan's national security."

Donald Trump Terry Gou

Getty

US President Donald Trump and Gou.

How Gou would manage the island's relationship to the US is less clear.

Foxconn announced in February plans to build a factory in Wisconsin, making it the largest investment in a new location by a foreign-based company in US history. Gou made the decision after meeting US President Donald Trump in 2017.

But Gou has questioned Taiwan's relationship with Washington and said this week that it should stop buying US weapons, citing the need for peace, Reuters reported.

Beijing has stepped up military drills near the island, with the most recent one involving long-range bombers and fighter jets near Taiwan and Japan this Monday.

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