Kuwait Times

Taiwan leader urges China for ‘calm’ talks as pressure grows Vows not to give in to Beijing’s recent moves

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Taiwan’s leader yesterday urged China to engage in “calm and rational” dialogue to maintain peace, vowing not to give in to Beijing’s recent moves to “threaten and intimidate” the self-ruled island. “As long as we can be calm, rational, and maintain a flexible attitude, I believe we should be able to find a solution that allows both sides to maintain peaceful and stable relations,” President Tsai Ing-wen said in a year-end news conference.

Tensions have grown since China suspended contacts with Tsai’s administra­tion in June over her refusal to endorse China’s claim that Taiwan and the mainland are part of a single Chinese nation. They were further amplified earlier this month when President-elect Donald Trump broke protocol by speaking with Tsai on the phone and said later he did not feel “bound by a one-China policy.”

Earlier this week, China’s first aircraft carrier and five other warships held drills that passed by Taiwan and sailed through the contested South China Sea, prompting Taipei to deploy fighter jets to monitor the fleet. China maintains a standing threat to use force to achieve its goal of absorbing Taiwan. Referring to such recent actions, Tsai said Beijing has been “gradually returning to the old ways of dividing, suppressin­g and even threatenin­g and intimidati­ng Taiwan. We hope that this is not a policy decision of the Beijing authoritie­s.” “We will not yield to the pressure nor go back to the old ways of confrontat­ion,”Tsai told reporters.

Diplomatic relations

Beijing has ratcheted up efforts to diplomatic­ally isolate Taiwan, intervenin­g to prevent the island’s participat­ion in internatio­nal forums and establishi­ng diplomatic relations with former Taiwan allies Gambia and Sao Tome and Principe. The moves have been seen as effectivel­y abandoning the unspoken diplomatic truce that lasted eight years under Tsai’s Chinafrien­dly predecesso­r. Meanwhile, the number of Chinese tourists visiting the island has drasticall­y fallen.

Tsai said her administra­tion expected 2017 to bring uncertaint­ies particular­ly in the first half, noting that the incoming US administra­tion could potentiall­y bring “changes in internatio­nal affairs.” Trump advisers have made conflictin­g statements about whether Trump’s call with Tsai signaled a new policy toward China but some analysts read it and other remarks critical of China as signals of a willingnes­s to increase ties with Taiwan, which would further anger Beijing.

But such a policy could bring economic advantages for Taiwan’s export-dependent half trillion-dollar economy, long-term access to senior US officials and more sales of advanced US weapons to defend against China. Tsai’s office said Friday she and a delegation of Taiwanese officials will make two stops in the US as part of a visit to diplomatic allies in Central America next month. China has repeatedly urged Washington to prevent Tsai from transiting. — AFP

 ??  ?? TAIPAI: In this photo released by the Taiwan Presidenti­al Office, President Tsai Ingwen delivers a year-end speech during an internatio­nal press conference at the presidenti­al office. — AP
TAIPAI: In this photo released by the Taiwan Presidenti­al Office, President Tsai Ingwen delivers a year-end speech during an internatio­nal press conference at the presidenti­al office. — AP

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