Global Times - Weekend

Taiwan island to lose more ‘ties’

Mainland commends Kiribati’s move to respect one-China principle

- By Xie Wenting, Zhao Yusha and Bai Yunyi

Kiribati became the second country to break ties with the island of Taiwan in less than a week, with observers predicting that more nations from the Pacific would cut ties before October and accelerate the building of diplomatic ties with the Chinese mainland.

The remarks were made after Kiribati officially notified Taiwan on Friday that it was cutting “diplomatic ties,” Joseph Wu, “foreign minister” of Taiwan, told reporters at a hastily organized press conference.

Geng Shuang, spokespers­on of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, told Friday’s regular media conference that China supports the important decision made by Kiribati as a sovereign independen­t state after the country cut “diplomatic ties” with the island of Taiwan and resumed diplomatic relations with the Chinese mainland.

Kiribati will see many developmen­t opportunit­ies through cooperatio­n with the Chinese mainland, Geng said. He stressed that principles and trust cannot be bought, dismissing rumors that the Chinese mainland used money to convince Kiribati to break ties with the island of Taiwan.

The Taiwan Affairs Office of China’s State Council also highly commended Kiribati government’s decision.

Experts predicted that more countries which have “diplomatic ties” with the island of Taiwan are likely to join Kiribati and Solomon Islands in the near future.

It is an irreversib­le trend that more countries will accelerate the pace of establishi­ng ties with the Chinese mainland, which is likely to usher in a small wave of establishi­ng diplomatic ties in the coming weeks, said Yin Cunyi, executive associate dean at the Institute of Taiwan Studies of Tsinghua University in Beijing.

Ripple effect

The ripple effect of breaking ties with Taiwan will surely continue, and Kiribati won’t be the last one, Yang Lixian, a research fellow at the Beijing-based Research Center of Cross-Straits Relations, told the Global Times.

While they are facing pressure from some Western countries, people in the Pacific countries, including Palau and Nauru, have shown willingnes­s to seek cooperatio­n with the Chinese mainland and sever ties with Taiwan, Yu Lei, chief research fellow at the research center for Pacific island countries of Liaocheng University, told the Global Times on Friday.

Haiti in Latin America was planning to cut ties, Wang Hau-yu, a “councilor” of Taoyuan city in Taiwan, said on Facebook earlier this month.

Enele Sopoaga, former prime minister of Tuvalu, a strong supporter of the island of Taiwan, stepped down after a general election on Thursday. The act was deemed as a blow for its “ally,” the island of Taiwan.

Yin said the possibilit­y of other Pacific or Caribbean countries cutting “diplomatic ties” with Taiwan before October 1 should not be dismissed. Taiwan has only 15 remaining “diplomatic allies.”

Groundless accusation

Kiribati is the seventh country to cut “diplomatic ties” with Taiwan since Tsai Ing-wen took office in 2016, following Sao Tome and Principe, Panama, Burkina Faso, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador and the Solomon Islands.

Taiwan’s “diplomatic” unrest should provoke Tsai to consider that by sabotaging cross-Straits relations, the island’s situation will only deteriorat­e, Yang noted.

After the Solomon Islands cut relations, Tsai accused the Chinese mainland of using “financial and political pressure.”

Taiwan authoritie­s hyped the groundless accusation that the Chinese mainland used a Boeing 737 to demand that Kiribati cut “diplomatic ties.”

Tsai also said on Friday afternoon that it is “a big mistake” for Kiribati to give up on Taiwan.

The usual practice of Tsai’s Democratic Progressiv­e Party is to weave lies to divert attention and deceive the vast number of Taiwan compatriot­s. They have done this in the past and will continue to do so, said Ma Xiaoguang, spokespers­on of the Taiwan Affairs Office of China’s State Council.

Only by upholding the one-China principle can cross-Straits relations be improved and developed, said Ma, noting that Taiwan compatriot­s can obtain a better livelihood and welfare.

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