Taiwan: Chinese delegation visits for the first time since the pandemic

The first Chinese delegation to visit Taiwan since the start of the Covid pandemic received a "warm welcome", said on Monday February 20 the mayor of Taipei which is led by the Kuomintang party, more favorable to a rapprochement with China than the Progressive Democratic Party of Chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen

Taiwan: Chinese delegation visits for the first time since the pandemic

The first Chinese delegation to visit Taiwan since the start of the Covid pandemic received a "warm welcome", said on Monday February 20 the mayor of Taipei which is led by the Kuomintang party, more favorable to a rapprochement with China than the Progressive Democratic Party of Chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen.

The six members of the Chinese delegation, which arrived from Shanghai on Saturday, met the mayor of the Taiwanese capital, Chiang Wan-an, a Kuomintang (KMT) member. The visit comes after a series of recent exchanges between Beijing and the island of Taiwan, which is preparing for the 2024 presidential election.

Chinese and Taiwanese officials "exchanged views on municipal issues, such as culture, sports and tourism... The Shanghai delegation also said they received a warm welcome," Taipei City Hall said in a statement. statement on Monday. Due to political tensions between Taiwan and China, trade was limited even before the pandemic.

Beijing claims the Democratic Island as part of its territory and has stepped up military, diplomatic and economic pressure since President Tsai Ing-wen was elected in 2016.

Difficult balance

Asked whether the visit was a sign of warming China-Taiwanese relations, Shanghai delegation head Li Xiaodong said on Sunday, "We look forward to it." "But it's impossible to achieve radical change just through a task force like mine. Both parties need to work together,” he said. Against this backdrop of warming, on Tuesday, the President of the Republic of China (known as Taiwan) announced that the island would strengthen its military ties with the United States. "Taiwan would cooperate even more actively with the United States and other democratic partners to address international challenges like authoritarian expansionism and climate change."

KMT Vice Chairman Andrew Hsia recently made a nine-day trip to China, where he called for more direct flights and the lifting of import restrictions. Last year, Beijing banned imports of Taiwanese fruit and fish, in retaliation for the visit to the island in August by Nancy Pelosi, then speaker of the United States House of Representatives.

After this official trip by the American representative, Sino-Taiwanese relations had reached their lowest point, Beijing having at the time retorted with gigantic military maneuvers around the island.

Taiwan Affairs Office chief in Beijing Song Tao assured Andrew Hsia that the Chinese Communist Party is ready to work with the KMT to promote relations based on the principle of rejecting the island's independence , according to the official Chinese news agency Xinhua.