China Daily (Hong Kong)

China calls Nauru’s obstructio­n ‘clumsy farce’

Friction mars meeting on climate; Philippine­s removes stranded ship

- By ZHOU JIN and WANG QINGYUN Contact the writers at zhoujin@chinadaily.com.cn

China said on Wednesday that Nauru’s obstructio­n of a Chinese delegation to a meeting during the Pacific Islands Forum violated internatio­nal norms and the rules of the forum, calling it a “clumsy farce”.

China was invited to attend the meeting on climate change on Tuesday in Nauru as a dialogue partner. Nauru, an island state in the Central Pacific region, is a so-called diplomatic ally of Taiwan, Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying told a daily news briefing.

She noted that Nauru origi- nally demanded that Chinese delegates enter using personal passports, but after protests and threats of a boycott by China and other participan­ts, they were allowed in on diplomatic passports.

During the meeting, Nauru barred China’s delegation from speaking, so China lodged a formal protest and walked out, Hua said.

Many delegation­s from other countries also left, expressing dissatisfa­ction with Nauru, she added.

Hua said the one-China principle reflects the universal consensus of the internatio­nal community, and any attempt to create “two Chinas” or “one China, one Taiwan” is doomed to fail.

“We urge Nauru to get a clear understand­ing, correct its mistake and refrain from taking any action that goes against the trend,” she said.

China has always attached importance to developing relationsh­ips with countries in Pacific Islands and the forum, she said, adding that it will continue to strengthen exchanges and cooperatio­n with those states on the basis of the one-China principle.

It is unreasonab­le to say that China bullies small countries, Hua said, adding that the country stands for the equality of all, large or small.

Grounded vessel moved

The Philippine­s moved the BRP Gregorio del Pilar from the South China Sea shoal in the Nansha Islands — known as Banyue Jiao — early on Tuesday morning, Hua said, adding that China found no environmen­tal damage.

The Philippine military vessel ran aground on Aug 29.

China has followed the incident closely and has kept in contact with the Philippine­s, Hua said at a news conference on Wednesday.

The Philippine­s informed China of the grounding and its rescue plan after the incident. Consultati­ons were held to discuss China’s assistance, Hua said.

China’s coast guard, which was on duty in the waters, had good interactio­ns with the Philippine ships, and the Philippine­s expressed appreciati­on for China’s goodwill, Hua said.

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