Taiwan has severed diplomatic ties with the Commonwealth of Dominica, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) said yesterday, blaming China for trying to shame President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) after his election victory.
Dominica, a diplomatic ally of 21 years, had established ties with the People's Republic of China (PRC) on March 23.
Minister of Foreign Affairs Eugene Chien (
"The ROC government expressed strong displeasure and regret about the Dominican government's decision to establish diplomatic ties with the PRC under the latter's threats and allurement," said ministry spokesman Richard Shih (石瑞琦).
China's official Xinhua news agency disclosed at 12:10am yesterday that Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing (李肇星) and Dominican Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit signed a joint communique on the establishment of diplomatic ties in Beijing on March 23.
Chien blasted China's snatching away another Taiwanese ally as a deliberate act to shame Chen after he won the presidential election.
"In June 2001, China established diplomatic ties with Macedonia when President Chen was visiting Latin America. In July 2002, China established diplomatic relations with Nauru on the same day President Chen took over the Democratic Progressive Party chairmanship," Chien said.
After Macedonia, Nauru and Liberia, Dominica became the fourth ally Taiwan lost to China during Chen's term. The loss of the Caribbean state, however, sent shockwaves through the ministry, which has long viewed Latin America as a diplomatic stronghold.
Taiwan's relations with Dominica began to deteriorate after Skerrit was appointed prime minister on Jan. 8, two days after former prime minister Pierre Charles died of a heart attack.
Barely a week after Skerrit became prime minister, he asked Taiwan to give US$58 million in aid to his country. The aid package Skerrit demanded far exceeded the original amount Taiwan had agreed to provide for the two countries' cooperation projects, Chien said.
When asked by Taiwanese diplomats to reduce the aid package to a reasonable amount, Skerrit threatened to establish diplomatic ties with China, Chien said.
"In Skerrit's speech to the nation yesterday [Monday], he told his people that China has given the country US$117.5 million in aid," Chien said, adding that Skerrit said the money would be used for construction of public facilities such as hospitals, schools and roads.
"Skerrit, only 32, does not fully understand international politics and harbors undue expectations of China ... Taiwan doesn't want to join a checkbook diplomacy race with China," Chien said.
From January to this month, Taiwanese diplomats had been striving to dissuade Skerrit from building ties with Beijing through senior Dominican officials' help. But the efforts were in vain, Chien said.
Noting Dominica, with a population of around 70,000, has neither strategic nor economic significance to China, Chien said the only purpose of China's work to establish diplomatic ties with the Caribbean state was to achieve its goal of "eliminating the ROC."
"China wants to destroy all our diplomatic ties to virtually wipe out Taiwan's space for existence in the international community. But its behavior would neither help cross-strait relations nor earn the 23 million Taiwanese people's affection," Chien said.
Chen and Premier Yu Shyi-kun were informed of Dominica's move early yesterday morning.
Although Dominica switched diplomatic relations to Beijing, its foreign ministry still sent a congratulatory note on Chen's re-election, Chien said.
At a ministry press conference at 10:30am, Chien, Javier Hou (
Grace Tong (
Hou said that, since February, Taiwanese diplomats have been keeping a close eye on Tong, whose business in Dominica had been suffering. She served as Antigua and Barbuda's representative to China and began working secretly to forge China's ties with Dominica, Hou said.
EUROPEAN TARGETS: The planned Munich center would support TSMC’s European customers to design high-performance, energy-efficient chips, an executive said Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, yesterday said that it plans to launch a new research-and-development (R&D) center in Munich, Germany, next quarter to assist customers with chip design. TSMC Europe president Paul de Bot made the announcement during a technology symposium in Amsterdam on Tuesday, the chipmaker said. The new Munich center would be the firm’s first chip designing center in Europe, it said. The chipmaker has set up a major R&D center at its base of operations in Hsinchu and plans to create a new one in the US to provide services for major US customers,
The Ministry of Transportation and Communications yesterday said that it would redesign the written portion of the driver’s license exam to make it more rigorous. “We hope that the exam can assess drivers’ understanding of traffic rules, particularly those who take the driver’s license test for the first time. In the past, drivers only needed to cram a book of test questions to pass the written exam,” Minister of Transportation and Communications Chen Shih-kai (陳世凱) told a news conference at the Taoyuan Motor Vehicle Office. “In the future, they would not be able to pass the test unless they study traffic regulations
‘A SURVIVAL QUESTION’: US officials have been urging the opposition KMT and TPP not to block defense spending, especially the special defense budget, an official said The US plans to ramp up weapons sales to Taiwan to a level exceeding US President Donald Trump’s first term as part of an effort to deter China as it intensifies military pressure on the nation, two US officials said on condition of anonymity. If US arms sales do accelerate, it could ease worries about the extent of Trump’s commitment to Taiwan. It would also add new friction to the tense US-China relationship. The officials said they expect US approvals for weapons sales to Taiwan over the next four years to surpass those in Trump’s first term, with one of them saying
BEIJING’S ‘PAWN’: ‘We, as Chinese, should never forget our roots, history, culture,’ Want Want Holdings general manager Tsai Wang-ting said at a summit in China The Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) yesterday condemned Want Want China Times Media Group (旺旺中時媒體集團) for making comments at the Cross-Strait Chinese Culture Summit that it said have damaged Taiwan’s sovereignty, adding that it would investigate if the group had colluded with China in the matter and contravened cross-strait regulations. The council issued a statement after Want Want Holdings (旺旺集團有限公司) general manager Tsai Wang-ting (蔡旺庭), the third son of the group’s founder, Tsai Eng-meng (蔡衍明), said at the summit last week that the group originated in “Chinese Taiwan,” and has developed and prospered in “the motherland.” “We, as Chinese, should never