US envoy chides China in talk with Taiwan leader
TAIPEI: Washington’s envoy to the United Nations held a virtual talk with Taiwan’s president yesterday after her visit to the island was scrapped in a diplomatic volte-face during the chaotic last days of the Trump administration.
Ambassador Kelly Craft praised Taiwan’s success in fighting the coronavirus while criticising China for blocking the island from global bodies during a video discussion with President Tsai Ing-wen.
“Unfortunately, Taiwan is unable to share those successes in UN venues, including the World Health Assembly, as a result of PRC obstruction,” Craft tweeted, referring to the People’s Republic of China.
Taiwan has been praised for its pandemic response, with fewer than 850 cases and seven deaths.
It effectively sealed its borders and implemented strict quarantine and tracing measures to stifle its initial outbreak and at one point last year recorded 253 days without a single local transmission. “If the pandemic has taught us anything, it is that more information, more transparency, is part of the answer,” Craft said.
China’s authoritarian leadership views Taiwan as its own territory and has vowed to seize it one day.
It keeps the island’s 23 million people locked out of international bodies like the World Health Organisation (WHO) to reinforce Taiwan’s diplomatic isolation.
China criticised Thursday’s phone call between Tsai and Craft.
“The Chinese side firmly opposes any form of official exchanges between the US and Taiwan,” foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters.
Craft’s Taiwan visit and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s trip to Europe were called off at the last minute, just a week before the inauguration of US Presidentelect Joe Biden.
In a statement released by her office after the video call, Tsai expressed regret that Craft was unable to visit and described Taiwan as a ‘force for good’ that deserves a place on the world stage.