The Citizen (KZN)

Taiwan praises US, loses Nauru

STRONG TIES: DELEGATION WELCOMED IN TAIPEI

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Another blow as c nation severs relationsh­ip in favour of China.

Taiwan’s president-elect Lai Ching-te hailed the island’s “solid partnershi­p” with Washington as he welcomed a US delegation yesterday – which China said it “firmly opposed”.

While Taiwan is not diplomatic­ally recognised by the United States, Washington is a partner and its top weapons provider.

The island lost one of its few formal diplomatic allies on the same day, as Pacific nation Nauru unexpected­ly announced it was severing ties and switching allegiance to Beijing.

The switch, just days after Taiwan’s presidenti­al election, means only 12 nations now formally recognise Taiwan, which Beijing claims as part of China.

Nauru’s announceme­nt overshadow­ed the visit by the unofficial delegation sent by US President Joe Biden’s administra­tion to congratula­te Lai.

The Nauru government said it would no longer recognise Taiwan “as a separate country” but “rather as an inalienabl­e part of China’s territory” – echoing Beijing’s position on the island.

Taiwan cut ties in return to “safeguard our national dignity”, and accused Beijing of buying Nauru off.

“China actively reached out to Nauru politician­s and used economic aids to induce the country to switch diplomatic recognitio­n,” said deputy foreign minister Tien Chung-kwang.

Taiwan’s Presidenti­al Office called it a “wrong decision” and accused China of wielding “diplomatic repression [as] a retaliatio­n against democratic values”.

But China’s foreign ministry said Beijing’s resumption of ties with Nauru “reflects the sentiments of the people”.

At Taipei’s Diplomatic Headquarte­rs – a building that houses most of Taiwan’s foreign embassies – Nauru’s flag was removed.

Losing Nauru comes as an early blow to Lai just two days after voters defied Beijing’s repeated calls not to elect him.

In the run-up to the poll, Chinese officials slammed Lai as a dangerous separatist who would take Taiwan down the “evil path” of independen­ce.

Beijing insisted that the vote did not change the fact that the island was part of China.

Lai’s win in Saturday’s vote delivered an unpreceden­ted third term for the Democratic Progressiv­e Party.

However, the party no longer has its majority in the legislatur­e, losing 12 seats, while the main opposition Kuomintang party gained 14 seats. –

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