Times of Suriname

China-Panama diplomatic ties signal universal consensus on one-China principle

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BEIJING/TAIPEI -- Panama signed a joint communique with China in Beijing Tuesday to establish diplomatic relations and break socalled “diplomatic ties” with Taiwan, a move perceived as more extensive recognitio­n of the one-China principle and a warning to the Taiwan administra­tion.

After signing the communique, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters that the political decision made by the Panamanian government meets the fundamenta­l interests of the country, and accords with the developmen­t trend of the times as well as the one-China framework already in place in the internatio­nal community. Also on Tuesday, Ma Xiaoguang, spokespers­on for the State Council’s Taiwan Affairs Office, said the move accords with the will of the people and represents an irresistib­le trend, urging the Taiwan administra­tion to clearly understand the situation and make the right choice.

Jiang Shixue, director of the Latin America research center at Shanghai University, said it is natural for China, the second largest user of the Panama Canal, to attract countries that previously have not had diplomatic relations, especially with its years of developmen­t and strengthen­ed national power. “The establishm­ent of diplomatic relations between the two countries will promote cooperatio­n between China and Central America and the Caribbean region, and will have a demonstrat­ive effect,” he said. Tuesday’s news has triggered a strong rebound in public opinion in Taiwan.

Many in Taiwan regarded Panama’s choice of severing “diplomatic relations” with the island a serious defeat for the current Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP) administra­tion, saying the DPP has only itself to blame. Hung Meng-kai, deputy directorge­neral of the KMT Culture and Communicat­ions Committee, said the breaking of “ties” meant the DPP administra­tion’s “foreign policy” had completely failed, and would only lead Taiwan to isolationi­sm.

“The DPP’s so-called maintainin­g the status quo policy in cross-Strait relationsh­ip has also been a complete failure. Two countries have broken ‘ties’ with Taiwan within a year, is this the outcome our administra­tors, who claimed themselves as the best communicat­ors, have given us?” said Hung, who warned that more countries might follow suit. Panama is the second country to break ties with Taiwan since the DPP administra­tion took office in May last year. It was Taiwan’s most important “friend” in Central and South America and was the first nation Taiwan’s current leader Tsai Ing-wen visited after she took power. According to Hsieh Ming-hui, chief executive officer of the Taiwan Competitiv­eness Forum, the DPP administra­tion’s refusal to recognize the 1992 Consensus had damaged the political mutual trust between Taiwan and the Chinese mainland, and hence resulted in the reduction of internatio­nal space for Taiwan. “The DPP should be fully responsibl­e,” Hsieh added.

Ties between China and Panama go back more than 160 years. The first group of Chinese immigrants arrived in Panama in the mid-1850s to work on the constructi­on of the trans-isthmus railway, which served as the main internatio­nal cargo route until the Panama Canal was built. The establishm­ent of diplomatic relations did not come as a surprise for Wu Hongying, director of the Latin America office of the China Institute of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations.

“Both the politician­s and business people in Panama have witnessed China’s increasing influence and regard it as an active and responsibl­e power,” Wu said. Yuan Zheng of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said the one-China principle, which was acknowledg­ed in the Resolution 2758 adopted by the UN General Assembly in October 1971, has become a universal consensus in the internatio­nal community. “More and more countries that have so-called ‘diplomatic relations’ with Taiwan will establish diplomatic ties with China in the future,” Yuan said. (Xinhua)

 ??  ?? Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Isabel Saint Malo de Alvarado, Panama’s vice president and foreign minister, attend a press conference after their meeting in Beijing, capital of China, June 13, 2017. China and Panama signed a joint communique...
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Isabel Saint Malo de Alvarado, Panama’s vice president and foreign minister, attend a press conference after their meeting in Beijing, capital of China, June 13, 2017. China and Panama signed a joint communique...

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