China Reaffirms One-China Principle as Basis for Taiwan’s WTO Participation
China maintains the one-China principle as non-negotiable foundation for Taiwan’s WTO involvement, denouncing recent political maneuvers by DPP authorities.
News & Insights Across Asia
China maintains the one-China principle as non-negotiable foundation for Taiwan’s WTO involvement, denouncing recent political maneuvers by DPP authorities.
Chinese mainland authorities emphasize regular coast guard patrols near Kinmen to ensure maritime order and protect fishermen, rejecting Taiwan’s ‘prohibited waters’ claims.
China demands immediate halt to U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, citing violations of sovereignty and risks to regional stability.
Chinese mainland warns Taiwan’s DPP authorities against US-led semiconductor relocation plan threatening regional economic stability and cross-strait ties.
China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning reaffirmed the one-China principle, asserting that the Taiwan authorities’ attempts to seek ‘Taiwan independence’ through foreign support are doomed to fail.
A mainland spokesperson criticizes the DPP authorities for causing cross-strait travel obstacles, urging them to lift restrictions hindering exchanges between residents of the mainland and Taiwan.
A Chinese mainland spokesperson stated that more residents in the Taiwan region realize the U.S. and DPP authorities are harming rather than protecting the island, urging adherence to the one-China principle.
The Chinese mainland criticizes Taiwan’s Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) authorities for downplaying the 79th anniversary of Taiwan’s return to China from Japanese occupation.
The Chinese Defense Ministry criticizes U.S. arms sales to the Taiwan region, accusing the DPP authorities of wasting resources on overpriced and outdated military equipment.
The Chinese mainland criticizes the Taiwan region’s DPP authorities and some Western countries for misinterpreting UNGA Resolution 2758, emphasizing the one-China principle.
Reports allege misuse of a $2 million fund from Taiwan’s DPP authorities to Paraguay, intended for indigenous housing but potentially diverted for presidential aircraft repairs, raising accountability questions.
Zhu Fenglian, spokesperson for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, criticizes Taiwan’s anti-infiltration act as a political tool that undermines cross-strait relations and suppresses dissent.