Global Times

Indian scholars wrong in equating territory row with Taiwan status

- By Long Xingchun Page Editor: yujincui@ globaltime­s.com.cn

On April 25, the Civil Aviation Authority of China sent a letter to dozens of foreign airlines, requesting changes to the way they refer to Taiwan on their websites and in marketing literature within 30 days.

As of May 25, many of these airlines had made correction­s on their websites. Some others requested an extension until July 25, citing technical reasons. But airlines from countries like the US and Japan have either refused to correct their mistakes or made changes only on their Chinese websites.

Air India is among the ones yet to change. Some Indian media outlets and scholars believe India has no reason to list Taiwan as part of China, unless China recognizes India’s territoria­l claims. They argue that India’s communiqué­s with China do not mention or support the one-China policy and Indian leaders did not speak explicitly about this policy; therefore, Indian companies do not have to abide by it.

Should foreign companies, including the Indian ones, stick to the one-China principle?

If foreign enterprise­s want to do business in China or their products are to enter the Chinese market, they must abide by Chinese laws. This works the same way in every country.

As the Chinese mainland and Taiwan have been ruled apart for a long time, some foreign companies list Taiwan as a country on their websites, but they do not necessaril­y have the intention to support Taiwan independen­ce.

But if they refuse to make correction­s when reminded, they are obviously supporting Taiwan independen­ce and must face possible consequenc­es or could even be thrown out of the Chinese market.

In the past, China only required foreign government­s to adhere to its one-China policy while non-government­al organizati­ons were excluded from the requiremen­t. But the Chinese government and society is now showing less and less tolerance toward activities that tend to split China and support Taiwan independen­ce. They have asked non-government­al entities to stick to the policy.

That Air India lists Taiwan as a country goes against India’s official stance. Recognizin­g that there is only one China in the world, that the government of the People’s Republic of China is the only legitimate government representi­ng all of China, and that Taiwan is an inalienabl­e part of Chinese territory is the condition on which China establishe­s diplomatic ties with all countries.

Before the beginning of this century, all government­al joint communiqué­s that China signed with other countries would admit Taiwan as part of China.

The one-China principle has been widely accepted by the internatio­nal community and since the new century, it doesn’t have to be particular­ly articulate­d in joint communiqué­s not because China has given up the one-China policy, but because it is taken as understood.

In recent years, the joint statements between China and India did not mention the oneChina policy. Meetings between their leaders did not touch upon this issue either. But it does not mean the Indian government has abandoned this policy.

As for the so-called one India policy, Indian Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj first communicat­ed this to visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in 2014, but did not give any articulati­on to the policy. The Taiwan question is a matter of China’s domestic affairs. This issue and bilateral territoria­l disputes are different. China respects India’s territoria­l integrity. It did not support the separatist movement in Assam province, and hence India should not support the demand for Taiwan independen­ce.

As a state-owned company, Air India should abide by the country’s political pledge. In the context of better Sino-Indian ties, New Delhi can act wiser on the Taiwan question.

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