Montreal Gazette

`Significan­t reflection­s' before Taiwan trip

Trudeau says MPS will study ramificati­ons

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OTTAWA • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government will ensure members of Parliament consider all the possible consequenc­es of a trade trip to Taiwan.

The House of Commons internatio­nal trade committee is seeking budget approval to make a visit to the country this fall.

But there are fears it could escalate tensions with China, which condemned a visit to Taipei by U.S. House of Representa­tives Speaker Nancy Pelosi earlier this month.

China regards the island of Taiwan as its territory and Beijing imposed sanctions on Pelosi in retaliatio­n for her visit and held military drills around the country.

Trudeau said Friday that members of Parliament make their own decisions about what their committees study and what travel they undertake.

“There are significan­t reflection­s going on right now,” he said at a news conference in Les Iles-de-la-madeleine, Que.

“Canada has a long-standing position around China and Taiwan that we will ensure to respect. China's belligeren­ce around this and their position is, of course, as it has been for a while, troubling,” he added.

“We will ensure that the parliament­arians making the decision to travel or not will be done with all the reflection­s of the consequenc­es and the impacts of it.”

The committee of MPS hopes to visit both Taiwan and Singapore during the journey, although the Commons has not yet approved the committee's budget for the trip.

New Democrat MP and committee member Brian Masse said earlier this week that Canadians “must support other democracie­s that have fought for their rights and freedoms.”

Randy Hoback, Conservati­ve MP and committee vice-chair, said MPS in a Canada-taiwan parliament­ary “friendship group” used to go to Taiwan about twice a year before COVID-19 restricted travel.

Hoback has previously visited the island, which is located about 160 kilometres off the coast of southeaste­rn China, with the group.

But the Tory MP said he would want to consult Global Affairs Canada before making the trip now. “There's no intent on my part to antagonize China,” he said Wednesday.

During Pelosi's visit, Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly urged China to de-escalate tensions, saying legislator­s often make internatio­nal visits and they should not be used to justify China's decision to stage military drills.

A spokeswoma­n for Joly said earlier this week that parliament­ary associatio­ns and friendship groups travel regularly and she respects their independen­ce.

“Canada continues to have strong and growing trade and people-to-people ties with Taiwan,” Emily Williams said.

 ?? JAMESON WU / REUTERS FILES ?? A flag-raising ceremony takes place in Taipei, Taiwan earlier this month. Canada is planning a trade trip to the country this fall.
JAMESON WU / REUTERS FILES A flag-raising ceremony takes place in Taipei, Taiwan earlier this month. Canada is planning a trade trip to the country this fall.

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