The Province

Bird group a casualty of Taiwan-China spat

Conservati­onists forced to leave internatio­nal organizati­on at the behest of Beijing

- TYLER DAWSON tdawson@postmedia.com

A Taiwanese bird conservati­on organizati­on has been removed from an internatio­nal birding group, the latest casualty of what appears to be part of China's campaign to pressure internatio­nal organizati­ons and delegitimi­ze Taiwan.

Earlier this month, the Chinese Wild Bird Federation, which is based in Taiwan, was cancelled as a partner organizati­on by BirdLife Internatio­nal, a conservati­on organizati­on with scores of members around the world. The Chinese Wild Bird Federation said in a statement posted to its website that BirdLife had demanded it change its name and commit to several demands involving abstaining from any political activity.

“This has been an issue in a number of internatio­nal organizati­ons, always at the behest of China,” said Margaret McCuaig-Johnston, senior fellow at the Institute of Science, Society and Policy at the University of Ottawa. “Having Taiwan as an equal-member country in internatio­nal organizati­ons creates the impression that Taiwan is an independen­t country, and that is not something that China wants to continue with.”

The news from the bird world comes as Taiwan and China are in the midst of an escalating standoff as the democratic island seeks closer ties with the United States. Dozens of warplanes and ships were in the Taiwan Strait over the weekend as Keith Krach, the United States under secretary of state for economic, energy and environmen­tal affairs, was in Taipei for talks and for the Saturday memorial for former Taiwan president Lee Teng-hui.

China has long claimed jurisdicti­on over Taiwan and has been pushing for one-country two-systems governance. Taiwan's democratic government is rejecting reunificat­ion and recently changed its passport to minimize “Republic of China” in its official name.

While birds, obviously, don't care a whit for borders or geopolitic­s, conservati­onists in the region are becoming frayed by the tension.

BirdLife Internatio­nal is a partnershi­p of non-government­al organizati­ons around the world that “strives to conserve birds, their habitats and global biodiversi­ty.”

The Chinese Wild Bird Federation has been a BirdLife partner since 1996.

The issue between BirdLife and the Chinese Wild Bird Federation, according to a statement on the Taiwan birder group's Facebook page, was that the Taiwan-based group refused to sign documents “formally committing to not promote or advocate the legitimacy of the Republic of China or the independen­ce of Taiwan from China.”

The group had also been asked to change its name — which it had already done three times — and the Chinese Wild Bird Federation was willing to discuss that.

“As an apolitical organizati­on which has never taken a stance on any such issue, we felt it was inappropri­ate to sign such a document and were unable to comply. We are not political actors, we are conservati­onists,” the Chinese Wild Bird Federation said in a statement.

China has often pressured internatio­nal groups over Taiwan's relationsh­ip, but usually on more prominent platforms, said McCuaig-Johnston. China, for example, has opposed Taiwan's membership in the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on, which co-ordinates air travel. Canada has backed Taiwan's efforts to participat­e in ICAO, based in Montreal, as an observer.

“It's a significan­t step, in my view, if China is taking the step to start to take these same measures two or three levels down in organizati­ons in very specific areas to, again, freeze Taiwan out,” said McQuaig-Johnston. “In my view, that's new and something to be rejected by other countries.”

Scott Simon, an east Asia expert at the University of Ottawa, said this shows China's ability to pressure internatio­nal NGOs and, more broadly, China's insistence that Taiwan is a part of the People's Republic.

“In the long run, it's part of a bigger strategy … they're trying to cut off Taiwan's relationsh­ip with everybody,” Simon said.

“They're cutting off these relationsh­ips one by one.”

 ?? ALY SONG/REUTERS FILES ?? A bird flies over Tiananmen Square in front of a portrait of the late Chinese Chairman Mao Zedong. A Taiwan-based bird-conservati­on group says its removal from an internatio­nal organizati­on was political.
ALY SONG/REUTERS FILES A bird flies over Tiananmen Square in front of a portrait of the late Chinese Chairman Mao Zedong. A Taiwan-based bird-conservati­on group says its removal from an internatio­nal organizati­on was political.

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