Taiwan leader urges China to curb 'military adventurism' by AFP Staff Writers Taipei (AFP) Jan 1, 2022 Taiwan's president on Saturday urged China to curb its "military adventurism", with tensions between the two sides at their highest level in years. Beijing has ramped up military and diplomatic pressure on Taiwan since Tsai Ing-wen came to power in 2016, as she rejects the stance that the island is Chinese territory. Chinese warplanes have made a historically high number of incursions into Taiwan's air defence zone in recent months. The authorities in Beijing "should stop the spread of military adventurism within their ranks", Tsai said in her New Year speech. "The use of military means is absolutely not an option for resolving the differences between our two sides." Beijing considers Taiwan a part of its territory, and has vowed to seize it one day, by force if necessary. President Xi Jinping in his New Year address declared that "the complete reunification of our motherland is an aspiration shared by people" in both China and Taiwan. Taiwan's defence ministry warned in October that military tensions with China were at their highest in four decades after a record number of Chinese jets entered its air defence zone. Beijing has also stepped up efforts in recent years to isolate Taiwan on the international stage. It regards any formal declaration of an "independent" Taiwan as a provocation and has repeatedly threatened consequences for countries that support Taipei in its self-determination. Beijing has encouraged Taiwan's dwindling diplomatic allies to switch sides. Most recently, Nicaragua recognised Beijing over Taipei, and China opened its embassy in the Central American nation on Friday.
Taiwan threatens legal action against Nicaragua over embassy 'seizure' Taipei (AFP) Dec 30, 2021 Taiwan on Thursday vowed to take legal action against former ally Nicaragua for "seizing" its embassy and making plans to transfer it to China after the Central American country switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing. According to Taiwan's foreign ministry, the Nicaraguan government "seized" its former embassy property that was already sold to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Managua after the two severed diplomatic ties earlier this month. China, which claims Taiwan as part of ... read more
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