China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Airline keeps ‘flexible’ China references

- By LUO WANGSHU luowangshu@chinadaily.com.cn

Responding to United Airlines’ “flexible” designatio­n of the Chinese mainland, Taiwan and Hong Kong on its booking website — listing them differentl­y from other places by currency, rather than name, to avoid indicating that those places are all part of China — the Foreign Ministry said on Thursday that respecting the one-China policy is a fundamenta­l requiremen­t for internatio­nal companies to do business in the country.

When selecting a global region on the airline’s website, users can click on a map to get a list of destinatio­ns and their languages. In the Asian Pacific region, the Chinese mainland, Taiwan and Hong Kong are not listed by name but by currency — the renminbi for the Chinese mainland, the Hong Kong dollar for Hong Kong and the New Taiwan dollar for Taiwan.

Other places under the Asian Pacific region category include country name. For example, Australia is listed first by its name.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said the “flexibilit­y” does not allow the airlines to sidestep the one-China policy.

“There is only one China in the world, and Taiwan is a part of China. It is an objective fact, and basic and internatio­nal common sense,” she said. She said the issue would be handled by China’s aviation authoritie­s.

Wang Hailiang, a Taiwan studies researcher at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, said the airline is reflecting Western society’s stubborn reluctance to recognize the one-China policy.

“Adopting tricks such as playing a word game cannot solve the fundamenta­l problem,” he said, adding that the Chinese government’s stance is firm and clear and won’t change.

“The Foreign Ministry has repeatedly expressed our fundamenta­l stance and won’t cave in,” he said.

On July 25, three US-based airlines — American, Delta and United — changed how they refer to Taiwan on their websites to show only the airport code and city names of airports in Taiwan, without the name “Taiwan” with them, as they had done before.

These were three last airlines to make changes. The move came after the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China demanded in April that 44 foreign airlines review their websites and apps to stop listing the Hong Kong and Macao special administra­tive regions and Taiwan in the same manner as independen­t countries in the same list.

The administra­tion said the practice was a violation of Chinese law and was counter to the one-China policy. It also said penalties would be imposed if the airlines failed to comply by the deadline.

However, the three airlines did not adopt the expression “Taiwan, China”, as many other internatio­nal airlines did after being requested to do so.

 ?? JIA TIANYONG / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? A freshman reads a campus map at Peking University’s Health Science Center after registerin­g at the university in Beijing on Thursday. His relatives help out with the luggage on the way to his dormitory. About 3,000 freshmen registered at the prestigiou­s university.
JIA TIANYONG / CHINA NEWS SERVICE A freshman reads a campus map at Peking University’s Health Science Center after registerin­g at the university in Beijing on Thursday. His relatives help out with the luggage on the way to his dormitory. About 3,000 freshmen registered at the prestigiou­s university.

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