India withdraws reps from Taiwan prez inaugural event
BEIJING: India has reportedly backtracked on sending representatives to the swearing-in ceremony of Taiwanese president-elect Tsai Ing-wen on Friday, days after naming two parliamentarians to attend the event.
This comes at a time when the Tsai-led Democratic Progress Party (DPP), taking over for the next four years, is readying a fresh policy initiative to focus on strengthening relations with India.
It means India will not have any official representation at the inaugural of Tsai, Taiwan’s first woman head of state, or at the dinner banquet on Friday evening.
An academic, who is also an editor, and a New Delhi-based BJP leader are expected to attend the ceremony.
“There is disappointment in the (Taiwan) government at India’s decision not to send parliamentarians. Taiwan’s first woman president is taking oath. It was a good opportunity for India to show solidarity,” an official said, adding New Delhi seems to have “bound itself up tightly in its own polices”.
But officials were confident this would not impact relations as the two countries try to expand ties under the Taipei government’s new policy.
Though India follows the “One China” policy and does not recognise Taiwan as a country, the reason for accepting the invitation and then saying no was not clear.
Diplomatic circles in Taipei are speculating it could well be the China factor, especially because any official visit to Taipei now would have been close to President Pranab Mukherjee’s visit to Guangzhou and Beijing next week. Mukherjee will be in China between May 24 and 27, and an Indian presence in Taipei would have been diplomatically awkward.
China considers Taiwan a “breakaway province”, with the Communist party leadership vowing reunification in future.
The New Southbound Policy Office (SBPO), which will directly function under the Taiwanese president, will focus on strengthening all-round ties with the ASEAN and South Asia, particularly India, diplomats told Hindustan Times.
The SBPO’s focus will be strengthening economic ties with India and expanding cultural, educational and peopleto-people links, a Taiwanese diplomat who served in India told Hindustan Times from Taipei.
“Earlier, the focus was ASEAN, now India and South Asia. This will be a high priority policy for the new president,” the diplomat said.