Taiwanese Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung said on Wednesday that China has no right to determine Taiwan’s status as a country, since Taiwan chooses its own government, and expressed willingness to warmly greet his Chinese counterpart in friendship.
China views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory and has stepped up military and political pressure to assert those claims, including increasing the intensity of war games, saying the island is one of its provinces with no right to be called a state.
Taipei Rejects Beijing’s View
Taiwan President Lai Ching-te and his government strongly reject that view, and have offered talks with China multiple times, but have been rejected. China calls Lai a “separatist”.
Asked by Reuters what he would say to Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi should they ever meet, Lin said that given the opportunity he would definitely shake hands with him.
“What the nature is of cross-Taiwan Strait relations can be discussed, but we are all human. First, extend the hand of friendship. If he shook my hand, that would be a good start,” he said at a press briefing to mark the first anniversary of Lai taking office. “If he takes his hand back, that’s his problem.”
Taiwan’s formal name is the Republic of China, the name of the government that, in 1949, fled to the island after losing a bloody civil war with Mao Zedong’s communists, who established the People’s Republic of China.
“Whether or not Taiwan is a country is not up to Wang Yi, nor the People’s Republic of China, to say. The whole world sees us as a country. We choose our governments democratically. It is our business what our name is.”
China’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Lin-Wang Meeting Unlikely
The chances Lin and Wang could meet are low. Neither government recognises the other, officials do not visit each other, and Taiwan is not a member of most international bodies due to China’s objections.
Lai on Tuesday reiterated an offer to talk to China, saying he sought peace but that the island must also boost its defences.
China responded by saying his comments were a “two-faced tactic” that was a “waste of effort and doomed to fail”.
Taiwan’s government has warned that Beijing could mark the anniversary with more military drills.
(With inputs from Reuters)