jeudi 4 juillet 2019

Two Chinas Policy

President Tsai Ing-wen to visit U.S. in July
By Yimou Lee

President Tsai Ing-wen speaks before Hai-an No. 10 maritime exercises simulating fending off Chinese invasion at Taipei Port, New Taipei City, May 4, 2019. 

TAIPEI -- President Tsai Ing-wen will spend four nights in the United States in July while visiting Caribbean diplomatic allies, her government said on Monday, angering China, which urged Washington not to allow her to visit.
China foolishly says independent Taiwan is a "Chinese province" with no right to state-to-state relations, calling it the most sensitive and important issue in ties with the United States, which has no formal ties with Taipei, but is its chief diplomatic backer and supplier of arms.
Taiwan’s Deputy Foreign Minister Miguel Tsao said President Tsai will spend two nights in the United States each way during her trip to St Vincent and the Grenadines, St Lucia, St Kitts and Nevis, and Haiti from July 11 to 22.
Details of the U.S. portion of the trip were still being worked out, he added.
Taiwan’s Central News Agency said President Tsai was expected to transit in New York and Denver.
President Tsai’s time in the United States will be unusually long, as normally she spends just a night at a time on transit stops.
Taiwan has been trying to shore up its diplomatic alliances amid pressure from China, which has been whittling down its few remaining diplomatic allies, especially in the Caribbean and Latin America.
The four Caribbean allies share similar ideals with Taiwan, Tsao said, adding that the theme of the visit is “freedom, democracy and sustainable governance”.
However, he added that the visit to Haiti, the Western Hemisphere’s poorest nation, will be less than 24 hours due to unrest there.
Protesters have for months agitated to remove President Jovenel Moise, a former businessman who took office in February 2017.
President Tsai, who faces re-election in January, has repeatedly called for international support to defend Taiwan’s democracy in the face of Chinese threats. 
She last went to the United States in March, stopping over in Hawaii at the end of a Pacific tour.
Beijing has regularly sent military aircraft and ships to circle Taiwan on drills in the past few years.
Taiwan now has formal ties with 17 countries, almost all small nations in Central America and the Pacific.

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