India 'playing with fire' by hosting Taiwan MPs: Chinese media
he Chinese state media on
Wednesday said India was "playing with fire" by hosting a parliamentary
delegation from Taiwan this week.
A delegation from Taiwan, the
first under the new Tsai Ing-wen government, is visiting India as part of
stepped up engagement following the setting up of a parliamentary friendship
forum in December, 2016. India, like
many countries, does not have diplomatic relations with Taiwan and has followed
a 'One China' policy. As a result, India does not have a formal embassy in
Taipei - only an 'India Taipei Association' that enables political and business
exchanges.
As Indian government officials do
not formally visit Taiwan, the exchange of MPs has been seen as one avenue of
maintaining contact.
This has apparently irked the
state media in China, which said on Wednesday that "at a time when new US
President Donald Trump has put the brakes on challenging China over the Taiwan
question, agreeing to change course and respecting the one China policy, India
stands out as a provocateur."
"Some Indians view the
Taiwan question as an Achilles' Heel of the mainland," said a commentary
in the Global Times, a tabloid published by the People's Daily, the Party
mouthpiece. "India has long wanted to use the Taiwan question, the South
China Sea and Dalai Lama issues as bargaining chips in dealing with
China," it added. The paper said
that while "pro-independence forces in Taiwan have become more isolated in
the world", those "who want to use the Taiwan question to contain the
mainland will have to suffer losses".
The article suggested, without
citing its sources, that given India's misgivings with the China-Pakistan
Economic Corridor that passes through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, the Modi
government had been advised "to play the Taiwan card, using the commitment
of the 'One-China policy' as leverage in exchange for China's endorsement of
'One India'." It, however, warned
that "by challenging China over the Taiwan question, India is playing with
fire". "Growing Taiwanese investment in India, including steel,
telecom and information technology are important to Modi's [Make in India]
campaign. Although the mainland is a major trading partner of India, political
discord and the historical feud make economic cooperation between the two
difficult.
"
China sees Taiwan as one of its
provinces, although the island has been administered separately following the
end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949, when the defeated Kuomintang (KMT) fled
to the island. Beijing has warily viewed the current government of Tsai
Ing-wen, which came to power defeating the KMT that had favoured closer
economic ties with the mainland.
While not outright pushing for
independence - which Beijing says it would prevent by any means necessary -
Tsai's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government has been more outspoken on
carving out a greater strategic and economic space for Taiwan and diversifying
its trade and political relationships, including by courting India.
The Global Times slammed Tsai for
"exploiting India's vigilance and strategic suspicions against
China". "The pro-independence leader came up with the 'new southbound
policy' to ramp up trade and economic interactions in Southeast Asia, South
Asia and Oceania, in which India is considered 'not one of the, but the most'
important country, according to Taiwan's representative to India Chung Kwang
Tien," the paper said. "Tsai hopes to put pressure on the mainland by
tying India and Taiwan closer."
It warned that India should
"be wary of Tsai's political intentions and avoid being used to confront
the mainland", adding "the best way for India to develop is by
participating in the Belt and Road Initiative and attract more investments from
the mainland."
While India is indeed going
forward with big-ticket investments from China as well including in five
industrial parks, it has not endorsed the Silk Road plan given that a key
segment, the China Pakistan Economic Corridor, runs through Pakistan-occupied
Kashmir (PoK). India has repeatedly voiced its concerns to China about the
CPEC, which China has said was "purely commercial", pointing out that
Beijing had itself similarly objected to Indian exploration projects in the
South China Sea, citing its sovereignty.
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