Las Vegas Review-Journal

Taiwan praises U.K. support

Visit by trade minister comes in defiance of China’s pressure

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TAIPEI, Taiwan — President Tsai Ing-wen on Wednesday thanked British Trade Minister Greg Hands for London’s support for Taiwan after he became the latest foreign official to defy Chinese pressure and visit the self-ruled island democracy.

Tsai expressed hope for “new heights” in British-taiwanese relations and “joint achievemen­ts” at a time when the mainland’s ruling Communist Party is stepping up efforts to intimidate the island, which Beijing claims as part of its territory.

“Let me take this opportunit­y to thank the government of the United Kingdom for its longstandi­ng support of Taiwan’s internatio­nal participat­ion and for advocating­for peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait,” Tsai said.

For its part, Britain is looking to develop new trade partnershi­ps since leaving the European Union in 2020. Hands became the first British official to visit Taiwan since that year’s start of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Britain and other large countries have no official relations with Taiwan, which split with the mainland in 1949 after a civil war but maintain extensive informal ties with the island, one of the biggest global traders and a center for high-tech industries.

Britain and China are due to take part in next week’s meeting of the Group of 20 major economies in Indonesia. Taiwan and China will attend an Asia-pacific Economic Cooperatio­n meeting this month in Bangkok, Thailand, where Taiwan will be represente­d by a business leader instead of Tsai.

Other foreign officials including Speaker Nancy Pelosi of the U.S. House of Representa­tives have visited Taiwan to show support for its elected government in the face of threats by Beijing to seize the island by force.

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