The Jerusalem Post

China warns US against allowing stopover for Taiwanese leader Tsai

- • By J.R. WU

TAIPEI (Reuters) – Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen will pass through the United States when she visits Latin America next month, the Taiwan Foreign Ministry said on Thursday, angering China which urged Washington to block any such stopover.

China is deeply suspicious of Tsai, who it thinks wants to push for the formal independen­ce of Taiwan, a self-governing democracy that Beijing regards as a renegade province, ineligible for state-to-state relations.

Details of the stopovers will be disclosed before the end of this week, the ministry said.

China said Tsai’s intentions were clear and urged the United States not to let her in.

“We hope the US can abide by the ‘one China’ policy... and not let her pass through their border, not give any false signals to Taiwan independen­ce forces, and through concrete actions safeguard overall US China relations and peace and stability in the Taiwan strait,” Hua Chunying, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n, told a briefing in Beijing.

The transit details are being closely watched as Taiwan media have speculated Tsai will seek to meet President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team ahead of his January 20 inaugurati­on.

Trump angered China when he spoke to Tsai this month in a break with decades of precedent and cast doubt on his incoming administra­tion’s commitment to Beijing’s “one China” policy.

The United States, which switched diplomatic recognitio­n from Taiwan to China in 1979, has acknowledg­ed the Chinese position that there is only “one China” and that Taiwan is part of it.

China’s sole aircraft carrier, accompanie­d by several warships, sailed close to Taiwan this week, which followed on from air force exercises also close to Taiwan.

Chinese Defense Ministry spokesman Yang Yujun repeated that the drills were routine, but added that such drills did have Taiwan in mind.

“The military’s holding of exercises is beneficial to raising our ability to oppose Taiwan independen­ce and protecting the country’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, and beneficial to protecting the peaceful developmen­t of cross-Taiwan Strait relations and peace and stability there,” he told reporters.

Tsai’s office earlier this month said she would visit Honduras, Nicaragua, Guatemala and El Salvador in that order. She will leave Taiwan on January 7 and return on January 15.

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