The Borneo Post

China ‘firmly opposed’ to all official USTaiwan exchanges

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BEIJING: China on Monday said it was “firmly opposed” to all official exchanges between the United States and Taiwan, as the self-ruled island’s presidente­lect Lai Ching-te welcomed an American delegation following his election victory.

“China has always firmly opposed any form of official exchanges between the United States and Taiwan, and resolutely rebutted the United States for interferin­g in Taiwan’s affairs in any way and under any pretext,” foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Mao Ning told a regular press conference.

China regards democratic Taiwan as part of its territory and has vowed to one day bring it under its control, by force if necessary.

It does not keep diplomatic relations with countries that formally recognise Taiwan as an independen­t state.

Washington has maintained that the delegation to Taipei is unofficial and part of standard protocol.

The group includes a former US national security adviser and a former deputy secretary of state, and was led by the chair of the American Institute of Taiwan – the de facto US embassy for the island.

“We urge the US to recognise the extreme complexity and sensitivit­y of the Taiwan issue, earnestly abide by the oneChina principle... and reaffirm US leaders’ repeated statements that it does not support Taiwan independen­ce, ‘two Chinas’, or ‘one China, one Taiwan’,” Mao said.

Washington should “follow through on its commitment­s on Taiwan, not seek to use the Taiwan issue as a tool to contain China... and not send any wrong signals to Taiwan independen­ce separatist forces”, she added.

Voters in Taiwan handed Lai, the independen­ce-leaning leader of the incumbent Democratic Progressiv­e Party, a comfortabl­e election victory.

Mao said Monday the poll was “a local affair of China”.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen shakes hands with former US deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg as former US national security advisor Stephen Hadley (right) and American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) Chair Laura Rosenberge­r look on during a visit at the Presidenti­al Office in Taipei.
— AFP photo Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen shakes hands with former US deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg as former US national security advisor Stephen Hadley (right) and American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) Chair Laura Rosenberge­r look on during a visit at the Presidenti­al Office in Taipei.

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