Monday, September 28, 2020

With EU help, Taiwan gets rare win in China naming dispute

 

With EU help, Taiwan gets rare win in China naming dispute


Beijing has made efforts to get international groups to refer to Taiwan as part of China
People walk past a Taiwanese flag in Taipei, Taiwan. Taiwanese officials expressed anger after the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy began listing on its website its six Taiwanese member cities as belonging to China. (Ann Wang/Reuters)

Taiwan said on Monday the European Union had stepped in to help after a global alliance of mayors stopped referring to Taiwanese cities as part of China, in a rare win for the island amid growing Chinese pressure.

China has ramped up efforts to get international groups and companies to refer on their websites and in official documents to democratic, self-ruled Taiwan as being part of China, to the ire of Taiwan's government and many of its people.

Over the weekend, Taiwanese officials expressed anger after the Brussels-based Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy began listing on its website its six Taiwanese member cities as belonging to China.

The mayors of the cities then wrote an open letter calling for the decision to be reversed.

Taiwan's Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said after the protest, the group had reverted to its original designation of the cities as being part of Chinese Taipei, a name Taiwan uses in some international bodies like the Olympics to avoid Beijing's objections to its participation.

The European Union "helped us in this effort," Wu told parliament, without giving details.

"We are very happy that with everyone's hard work the name has reverted," he said.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said Taiwan was an inalienable part of Chinese territory. (Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images)

"Though some people may not be happy with this name, at least the way we participate is not placed under another country."

The Global Covenant, in a short statement, blamed a "technical glitch in the database" for the designation change, which it said had now been corrected.

The European Commission said it was "made aware of this issue over the weekend," and referred to the Global Covenant's statement about a technical glitch.

No EU member states have diplomatic ties with Taiwan, and the EU itself tends to keep a low profile when it comes to Taiwan, wary of upsetting China, its second-largest trading partner.

In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said Taiwan was an inalienable part of Chinese territory.

"Cities in the Taiwan region certainly should be listed as Chinese," he told reporters.

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