|
|
Updated Sunday, January 6, 2008 0:00 am TWN, Reuters Malawi to continue diplomatic ties with Taiwan — for nowA Malawian foreign ministry official had said on Friday that Malawi would give diplomatic recognition to China but retain economic links with Taiwan. “A delegation ... was in mainland China last week to discuss bilateral relations with Malawi and the announcement will be made anytime this month,” the official told Reuters. China, which is importing minerals and oil from around the world to feed its booming economy, is the world’s third-largest investor in Africa. In the first 10 months of this year alone, China’s total trade with Africa leaped by just over 30 percent as Chinese companies signed contracts with countries ranging from Congo to Niger. Taiwan’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Phoebe Yeh said that so far Malawi had told Taiwan officials that the two countries’ relations will not change. She said the talk of Malawi changing relations was not new and “...is just speculation for the future, but relations are very sensitive and abnormal right now.” Malawi and Taiwan media reported on Friday that the Malawian government had canceled a planned meeting with Taiwanese officials, raising speculation Malawi might end 41 years of diplomatic relations with the island nation in favor of mainland China. Malawi’s leading daily, “The Nation,” said Taiwanese Foreign Affairs Minister James Huang had been due to meet Malawian President Bingu wa Mutharika this week. Taiwan said last month it had sent officials to Malawi to save diplomatic relations amid reports that arch-rival China was aggressively courting the southern African nation. The Malawian foreign ministry official did not comment on the future of diplomatic ties with Taiwan, but said Malawi would like to maintain its economic ties. Malawi’s rapidly growing economy — buoyed by the agricultural sector — has never had diplomatic relations with China. Many Western officials have criticized Beijing’s multi-billion-dollar aid, trade and investment overtures in Africa, saying its no-strings approach sidesteps necessary safeguards to maintain transparency and avoid corruption. African leaders brushed those concerns aside at an Africa-European Union summit last month, saying they were mature enough able to deal with China and defend their own economic interests. China, which has seen Taiwan as part of its territory since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949, has been allegedly engaged in attempting to isolate the island internationally, pressuring it into unification by making its diplomatic allies switch ties to Beijing. Taiwan’s allies, which the island leadership sees as key to its legitimacy against China, have dwindled to 24, mostly small countries in poor regions, compared to China’s 170. Subscribe to The China Post and save 25%. Click here |
![]() Malawi workers use the skills taught by technicians from Taiwan to operate a rice husking machine. The government in Taipei is striving to maintain diplomatic ties with the African ... Enlarge Photo Foreign Affairs Breaking News Most Read
| |||||||||||