China says Taiwan has no right to join the United Nations

DW

Published: October 27, 2021, 10:22 PM

China says Taiwan has no right to join the United Nations

China on Wednesday insisted that Taiwan did not have the right to join the United Nations, as the United States backed the island's inclusion at the global diplomatic stage.

Beijing said the issue of Taiwan's representation at the UN level had already been resolved and it criticized Washington for raising the matter again.

"Taiwan has no right to join the United Nations," Ma Xiaoguang, spokesman for China's Taiwan Affairs Office, said.

"The United Nations is an international governmental organization composed of sovereign states... Taiwan is a part of China."

Taiwan, formally known as the Republic of China, is a self-ruled democracy that has had an independent government since 1949.

However, China considers the island to be its renegade province, which will ultimately be reunified, by force if necessary.

Beijing has also claimed the sole right to represent Taiwan internationally.

UN resolution 2758

The Chinese Foreign Ministry on Wednesday said UN General Assembly resolution 2758 completely resolved the issue of the representation of China and Taiwan in the UN.

The 1971 UN resolution gave the China seat, held by Taiwan until then, to the government in Beijing.

"The UN system, the specialized agencies, and the secretariat should handle Taiwan-related affairs in accordance with the One China principle and the resolution," said Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian.

"If the US continues to play the Taiwan card, it will surely bring game-changing and huge risks to China-US relations," Zhao said.

Taipei, on the other hand, argues that the resolution only deals with China's representation in the UN system, and not with Taiwan's status.

US supports Taiwan's UN participation

The Chinese reaction came a day after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he regretted that Taiwan had been excluded from the world stage.

"Taiwan's meaningful participation in the UN system is not a political issue, but a pragmatic one," Blinken said, in a statement marking 50 years since the UN General Assembly voted to seat Beijing and boot out Taipei.

"That is why we encourage all UN member states to join us in supporting Taiwan's robust, meaningful participation throughout the UN system and in the international community," he said.

Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen welcomed the US top diplomat's remarks while her foreign minister, Joseph Wu, thanked Washington for its backing.

"We'll continue to fight for our rights in international organizations," he said, adding that the situation was "growing more dangerous" with China's military and political intimidation of the island.

"We are determined to defend ourselves," the minister said.

Until 1971, China was represented in the UN by the government in Taiwan, where nationalist forces had fled after losing the civil war to the communists.

The United States too switched recognition to Beijing in 1979.

But at the same time, US Congress passed the Taiwan Relations Act that obligated the US supply of weapons to the island for its self-defense.

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