Taiwan’s government has thanked Paraguay for its decision this past week to expel a visiting People’s Republic of China (PRC) envoy for urging the South American country to ditch Taipei in favor of Beijing.
Paraguay on Thursday kicked out Xu Wei (徐偉), a senior Chinese envoy to Latin America, after he openly called on the South American nation to break off ties with Taiwan. He was given 24 hours to leave the country, an AP report said.
Paraguay’s foreign ministry said it revoked the visa of Xu, who was in Paraguay for an annual UNESCO meeting and declared him persona non grata “over interference in internal affairs.”
Photo: Yang Cheng-yu, Taipei Times
The announcement was made after Xu skipped the UNESCO session and instead appeared at Paraguay’s Congress in Asuncion accompanied by two China-friendly Paraguayan lawmakers, where he openly called on the Taiwan ally to change its diplomatic recognition, the AP report said.
Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday praised Paraguay’s decision to expel Xu to uphold Paraguay’s sovereignty and safeguard the 67-year friendship between Taipei and Asuncion.
The ministry also urged the international community to clearly see how China is “abusing” its participation in international organizations such as UNESCO for its own interests and “sabotaging the rules-based international order.”
Asked about Paraguay’s move to expel Xu, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian (林劍) said on Friday that the South American country had made “unfounded and unjustified accusations” against Xu.
Lin reiterated Beijing’s long-held stance that Taiwan is part of the PRC’s territory.
Paraguay is the only nation in South America and one of 12 countries worldwide that formally recognize the Republic of China, Taiwan’s official name.
The government of President Santiago Pena, which took office in August last year, has repeatedly affirmed its commitment to Taipei, despite efforts by Beijing to snatch away Taiwan’s formal allies in recent years.
Taiwan has lost 10 formal diplomatic allies, including four in Latin America — Honduras, Panama, the Dominican Republic and El Salvador — since May 2016, when the Democratic Progressive Party assumed office.
In other news, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍), along with Paraguayan Ambassador to Taiwan Carlos Jose Fleitas and Master Transportation Bus Manufacturing chairman Wu Ting-fa (吳定發), on Saturday saw off a shipment of 30 domestically made electric buses to Paraguay from Taipei Port, a milestone in Taiwan’s efforts to help the South American country go green by exporting local technology.
The buses are expected to arrive in Paraguay by the end of February.
According to Lin, the cooperation project was first proposed by Pena and later confirmed in an memorandum of understanding signed in May during Pena’s visit to Taiwan.
As part of the deal, Master Transportation Bus Manufacturing also committed to investing an estimated US$30 million in an e-bus manufacturing and assembly plant in Paraguay.
An undersea cable to Penghu County has been severed, the Ministry of Digital Affairs said today, with a Chinese-funded ship suspected of being responsible. It comes just a month after a Chinese ship was suspected of severing an undersea cable north of Keelung Harbor. The National Communications and Cyber Security Center received a report at 3:03am today from Chunghwa Telecom that the No. 3 cable from Taiwan to Penghu was severed 14.7km off the coast of Tainan, the Ministry of Digital Affairs said. The Coast Guard Administration (CGA) upon receiving a report from Chunghwa Telecom began to monitor the Togolese-flagged Hong Tai (宏泰)
A cat named Mikan (蜜柑) has brought in revenue of more than NT$10 million (US$305,390) for the Kaohsiung MRT last year. Mikan, born on April 4, 2020, was a stray cat before being adopted by personnel of Kaohsiung MRT’s Ciaotou Sugar Refinery Station. Mikan was named after a Japanese term for mandarin orange due to his color and because he looks like an orange when curled up. He was named “station master” of Ciaotou Sugar Refinery Station in September 2020, and has since become famous. With Kaohsiung MRT’s branding, along with the release of a set of cultural and creative products, station master Mikan
RISING TOURISM: A survey showed that tourist visits increased by 35 percent last year, while newly created attractions contributed almost half of the growth Changhua County’s Lukang Old Street (鹿港老街) and its surrounding historical area clinched first place among Taiwan’s most successful tourist attractions last year, while no location in eastern Taiwan achieved a spot in the top 20 list, the Tourism Administration said. The listing was created by the Tourism Administration’s Forward-looking Tourism Policy Research office. Last year, the Lukang Old Street and its surrounding area had 17.3 million visitors, more than the 16 million visitors for the Wenhua Road Night Market (文化路夜市) in Chiayi City and 14.5 million visitors at Tainan’s Anping (安平) historical area, it said. The Taipei 101 skyscraper and its environs —
Taiwan on Friday said a New Zealand hamburger restaurant has apologized for a racist remark to a Taiwanese customer after reports that it had first apologized to China sparked outrage in Taiwan. An image posted on Threads by a Taiwanese who ate at Fergburger in Queenstown showed that their receipt dated Sunday last week included the words “Ching Chang,” a racial slur. The Chinese Consulate-General in Christchurch in a statement on Thursday said it had received and accepted an apology from the restaurant over the incident. The comment triggered an online furor among Taiwanese who saw it as an insult to the