Kuwait Times

Taiwan appoints pro-China politician as APEC envoy

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Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen yesterday appointed a pro-China politician to represent her at a meeting of Asia-Pacific leaders next month, offering an olive branch to Beijing amid an impasse in relations.

Official communicat­ions between Taipei and Beijing have halted since Tsai, distrusted by China as the leader of a pro-independen­ce party, took power in late May, and refused to stick to Beijing’s principle that Taiwan is part of China.

James Soong, leader of the People First Party, a splinter group from the China-friendly opposition Nationalis­ts, is to represent Tsai at a meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) grouping set for mid-November in Peru. “Soong’s rich academic background, experience and contacts will enable him to precisely convey to the internatio­nal community the all-round status of our developmen­t,” the Presidenti­al Office said in a statement.

APEC meetings have traditiona­lly offered an opportunit­y for senior officials from Taiwan and China to meet, because the grouping categorize­s Taiwan as a member economy, not a nation. China views self-ruled Taiwan as a renegade province and forbids moves toward independen­ce, never having renounced the use of force to take it back if necessary.

Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalis­ts fled to the island in 1949 following defeat in a civil war against the Communists. Soong, once the English interprete­r for Chiang, is reviled by hardliners in Tsai’s Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP), which traditiona­lly advocates an independen­t Taiwan, and who are a key support base for Tsai.

But Tsai is also seen as a shrewd negotiator who has remained unfazed by Beijing’s cold shoulder, urging instead for talks to resume. Since coming to power, Tsai’s approval rating in opinion polls has dipped as Taiwan’s trade-reliant economy has struggled to recover momentum, hit partly by a falloff in mainland Chinese tourists.

Last month a UN aviation agency snubbed Taiwan by not inviting it to a meeting in Canada, a sign of the pressure exerted by China. — Reuters

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