The Herald (South Africa)

China condemns Taiwan president’s US trip

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Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen will make sensitive stopovers in the US on her way to and from Central America that China’s foreign ministry condemned yesterday, but Taipei would not confirm a meeting with US House speaker Kevin McCarthy.

Taiwanese presidents routinely pass through the US while visiting diplomatic allies in Latin America, the Caribbean and the Pacific, which, though not official visits, are often used by both sides for high-level meetings.

The US, like most countries, has no formal diplomatic relations with Chinese-claimed Taiwan, but is its most important internatio­nal backer and arms supplier.

Tsai would transit through New York and Los Angeles as part of a trip to Guatemala and Belize, leaving Taipei on March 29 and returning on April 7, presidenti­al office spokespers­on Lin Yu-chan said.

Sources have said McCarthy intends to meet her during the California leg of her visit.

Asked whether he could confirm the McCarthy meeting, Taiwan vice foreign minister Alexander Yui said details of the US transits would be given at a later date once arrangemen­ts had been finalised.

China staged war games near Taiwan in August after a Taipei visit by then House speaker Nancy Pelosi.

China has said the US is colluding with Taiwan to challenge Beijing, and is giving support to those who want the island to declare formal independen­ce.

In Beijing, Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin said that it strongly opposed any contacts between the US and Taiwan’s government and that it had already made “stern representa­tions” to Washington about the stopovers.

“We again warn the Taiwan authoritie­s that there is no way out for Taiwan independen­ce, and any illusions about attempts to collude with external forces to seek independen­ce and provocatio­n is doomed to fail,” Wang said.

Guatemala and Belize are two of only 14 countries which maintain formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan.

Honduras said last week it would seek diplomatic ties with Beijing, but has yet to break them off with Taiwan.

Speaking shortly before Taiwan’s announceme­nt of Tsai’s trip, a senior US administra­tion official said her expected transits were standard practice and China should not use them as a pretext for aggressive action towards the democratic­ally governed island.

The senior US official said on Monday night that every president of Taiwan had transited through the US, and that Tsai had done so herself six times since taking office in 2016, most recently in 2019.

She had met members of Congress during all those visits, the official added, noting the Covid-19 pandemic had limited her travel in recent years.

“We see no reason for Beijing to turn this transit, again, which is consistent with longstandi­ng US policy, into anything but what it is.

“It should not be used as a pretext to step up any aggressive activity around the Taiwan Strait,” the official said.

The official said Washington had communicat­ed to Beijing that Tsai’s stopovers were in keeping with past precedent.

“There is nothing new from our point of view.”

Noting that President Joe Biden hoped to speak to Chinese leader Xi Jinping soon and that secretary of state Antony Blinken would like to reschedule a postponed trip to Beijing, the official said: “We urge the PRC [People’s Republic of China] to keep these channels of communicat­ion open.

“In terms of contact with McCarthy’s office, we offer briefings to members before engagement­s.

“We tend to do that before travel, before meetings.

“We’ve had some regular contact there.”

Tsai’s anticipate­d US meeting with McCarthy is seen as a potential alternativ­e to a sensitive visit by the Republican speaker to Taiwan, a trip he has said he hopes to make.

Taiwan is China’s most sensitive territoria­l issue and a major bone of contention with Washington, which maintains only unofficial ties with Taipei, but is required by US law to provide the island with the means to defend itself.

 ?? Picture: CARLOS GARCIA RAWLINS/ REUTERS ?? DETAILS TO COME: Taiwan vice foreign minister Alexander Yui speaks at a news conference in Taipei yesterday about Taiwan President Tsai Ingwen’s US stopover
Picture: CARLOS GARCIA RAWLINS/ REUTERS DETAILS TO COME: Taiwan vice foreign minister Alexander Yui speaks at a news conference in Taipei yesterday about Taiwan President Tsai Ingwen’s US stopover

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