Bangkok Post

Taiwan president making state visits amid China stalemate

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>> TAIPEI: Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen left yesterday for the United States and three South Pacific nations in an effort to crack the diplomatic isolation imposed by rival China.

Ms Tsai will visit the Marshall Islands, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu while transiting through Hawaii and the US territory of Guam. The three are among just 20 countries that extend Taiwan formal diplomatic recognitio­n.

Ms Tsai’s travels follow Panama’s switching of diplomatic relations to Beijing in June in what was seen as a major diplomatic setback for Taiwan.

“We want to prove to the world that Taiwan is capable of, and is willing to, make more contributi­ons to the internatio­nal community,” Ms Tsai said yesterday ahead of her departure.

In the Marshalls and Solomons, Ms Tsai will find an “opportunit­y to better understand the sustainabl­e developmen­t needs of the two countries and determine how [Taiwan] can assist in line with steadfast diplomacy,” the government said in a statement posted on its official website.

In Beijing, foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang demanded Ms Tsai be barred from transiting through the US, which, like most countries, has only unofficial relations with Taiwan.

“Regarding the transit of Taiwan’s leader in the United States, I think her true intention is clear for all to see,” Mr Geng said at a daily news briefing.

Washington should “not allow her to stop over, avoid sending any erroneous messages to the Taiwan independen­ce force, and maintain the general picture of China-US relationsh­ip and peace and stability of the Taiwan Strait with concrete efforts,’’ Mr Geng said. Beijing has lodged “solemn complaints” with the US, Mr Geng said.

China claims sovereignt­y over democratic, self-ruled Taiwan, which split from the mainland amid civil war in 1949, and uses diplomatic and economic pressure to limit the island’s internatio­nal relations. Washington does not formally recognise Taiwan but maintains close economic, diplomatic and military ties with the island.

While it officially advocates “peaceful unificatio­n”, China has never renounced its threat to use force to gain control over Taiwan, which had only distant relations with China for most of its history and was a Japanese colony from 1895 to 1945.

Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed on Oct 18, the first day of a ruling Communist Party congress, that China would not allow anyone to “separate any part of Chinese territory from China,” in a reference to Taiwan.

The vast majority of Taiwanese favour continuing their de facto independen­t status and Ms Tsai’s top China policymake­r told a forum in Taipei on Thursday that the two sides needed a “new chapter” in relations.

“We know that Xi Jinping is an extremely ambitious leader and he doesn’t want to get to 2020 with his Taiwan scorecard a blank,” said Lin Chong-pin, a retired strategic professor from Tamkang University in Taiwan.

He added: “I don’t think Tsai Ing-wen will cross the red line” during her travels, referring to actions that emphasise Taiwan’s legal independen­ce from China.

Beijing resents the Tsai government because her Democratic Progressiv­e Party advocates Taiwan’s formal independen­ce, although Ms Tsai has played down that aim. Beijing cut off exchanges between the two government­s last year after Ms Tsai made clear she would not endorse China’s view that Taiwan is a part of China.

The three countries Ms Tsai is visiting are developing nations that look to Taiwan for economic support.

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