China slammed Eswatini's Prime Minister Russell Dlamini's visit to the Taiwan region, urging the African country to "mend its ways as soon as possible". Dlamini reportedly arrived in Taiwan on Monday. He met with the region's outgoing head Tsai Ing-wen, among other people, visited companies and attended an event pitching for investment in his country. Voicing firm opposition to the visit, China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said on Friday it is a serious violation of the one-China principle and China's sovereignty. Lin also told a regular news conference that Eswatini, as well as its people have "hardly benefited" from its "diplomatic ties" with the Taiwan region over the past 56 years. "The Taiwan authorities squander the taxpayers' money to support some bigwigs in Eswatini to maintain the so-called diplomatic ties," he said. "This kind of relationship is of no value to people in both Taiwan and Eswatini." Eswatini is one of the only 12 countries in the world that have maintained "diplomatic ties" with Taiwan. The latest country to sever ties with Taiwan is Nauru, which announced it would cut "diplomatic relations" with the region following the latter's elections held in January. After the elections, more than 180 countries and organizations reaffirmed their commitment to the one-China principle. These facts show that one China is where global opinion trends, Lin said, adding that Eswatini's "diplomatic ties" with Taiwan is against the trend, and will not last. The spokesman called on "certain persons in power in Eswatini" to see squarely the prevailing consensus, and stop "being self-deceptive". Also, the people in Eswatini will see clearly the truth about "Taiwan independence", and recognize the perils of Taiwan's "dollar diplomacy", Lin added. |
'Nobody should live like this'More videos of Kiwi hostage Philip Mehrtens in Papua warn against Indonesian military air strikesDozens of jobs set to be axed at Commerce CommissionWho is Mohammad Mustafa, the new Palestinian PM?Unused Auckland surgical centre could be treating more than 15,000 patients a yearGovernment negotiations end, deal to be signed on FridayMinistry for Primary Industries aims to slash consultant spend by 34 percent to cut costsForget the gym bunnyAuckland Airport expects the population of a city during school holidaysGovernment departments defend staffing increase in late 2023