The Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday denounced comments by former Australian prime minister Paul Keating in an interview, in which he referred to Taiwan as “Chinese real estate.”
Taiwan “is not the property of any nation,” the ministry said in a statement. “The Republic of China, Taiwan, is an independent sovereign country and is not subordinate to the People’s Republic of China.”
Keating’s remarks were “inconsistent with the current geopolitical situation,” the ministry said, adding that Taiwan’s sovereign status would not be altered because of the former Australian prime minister’s “biased comments.”
Photo: Yang Cheng-yu, Taipei Times
The ministry was referring to Keating’s remarks during an interview with Australia Broadcasting Corp on Thursday, in which he claimed that Taiwanese were “sitting on Chinese real estate.”
“Taiwan is not a vital Australian interest,” said Keating, who served as Australia’s prime minister from 1991 to 1996.
Keating suggested that Australia should avoid involvement in any conflict between China and Taiwan.
He sought to justify potential military action by Beijing by comparing Taiwan with Tasmania, an island state of Australia.
“We would fight anybody touching Tasmania like the Chinese will fight anyone touching Taiwan,” he said.
The 80-year-old former Labor Party leader also expressed his belief that AUKUS — a trilateral security pact with the UK and the US pitched as a bulwark against China’s increasing influence in the region — unnecessarily compromised Australia’s defense.
“We are better left alone than we are being ‘protected’ by an aggressive power like the United States,” Keating said.
Keating’s comments about Taiwan have been dismissed by incumbent Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese as well as opposition leader Peter Dutton, Australian media reported.
The ministry in its statement also said that Taiwan and Australia are “like-minded partners” in the Indo-Pacific region with “shared strategic interests,” and that Canberra had on more than one occasion expressed support for peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.
Taiwan would continue to deepen cooperation with Australia across various fields, and jointly promote peace and prosperity in the region, the statement said.
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