Santa Cruz Sentinel

US tweets support for Taiwan, sparking opposition from China

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UNITED NATIONS >> The United States tweeted its support for Taiwan’s participat­ion in the United Nations on Friday, provoking a sharp response from China expressing “strong indignatio­n and firm opposition.”

The tweet from the U.S. Mission to the United Nations said the 193-member global organizati­on was founded to serve “all voices,” welcome “a diversity of views and perspectiv­es” and promote human rights. It said “Barring #Taiwan from setting foot on UN grounds is an affront not just to the proud Taiwanese people, but to UN principles.” It was retweeted by U.S. Ambassador Kelly Craft.

The decision by the U.S. administra­tion to suddenly raise the Taiwan issue follows President Donald Tump’s criticism of China over the coronaviru­s pandemic after weeks of elaborate praise of President Xi Jinping’s performanc­e in tackling the crisis.

Trump is now blaming China for not acting quickly to inform the world of exactly what was happening and halted U, S, contributi­ons to the World Health Organizati­on, accusing it of parroting Beijing.

China claims sovereignt­y over self-ruled Taiwan and uses its diplomatic clout to stop the island from joining any organizati­ons that require statehood for membership. Taiwan left the United Nations in 1971 when China joined and is excluded from all of its agencies, including the WHO’s assembly where its observer status has been stripped. At the same time, it has one of the most robust public health systems in the world, and has won praise for its handling of the virus outbreak.

The spokespers­on for China’s U.N. Mission called the U.S. Mission tweet “a serious violation” of the General Assembly resolution that gave China the U.N. seat, three U.S.-China joint communique­s and China’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.

“It gravely interferes with China’s internal affairs and deeply hurts the feelings of the 1.4 billion Chinese people,” said the spokespero­n, who was not named. “There is only one China in the world. The government of the People’s Republic China is the sole legal government representi­ng the whole of China, and Taiwan is an inalienabl­e part of China.”

China’s mission accused the U.S. of ”hypocrisy” for citing the U.N.’s welcome of diverse views while repeatedly using its power to issue visas to block or delay U.N. member states and civil society organizati­ons from attending activities at the United Nations. China urged the United States to abide by the one- China principle, the three joint communique­s between the two countries and the General Assembly resolution “and immediatel­y stop backing the Taiwan region, politicizi­ng, and underminin­g internatio­nal response to the pandemic.”

“While the coronaviru­s is raging across the world, people of all countries are calling for internatio­nal solidarity in fighting the pandemic,” the Chinese spokespers­on said. “Political manipulati­on by the United States on an issue concerning China’s core interests will poison the atmosphere for cooperatio­n of member states at a time when unity and solidarity is needed the most.”

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