Taiwan Says It Won’t Be Intimidated by China’s ‘Hooligan’ Diplomats

Taiwan Says It Won’t Be Intimidated by China’s ‘Hooligan’ Diplomats
Taiwan Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Joanne Ou speaks at a news conference in Taipei, Taiwan, on Feb. 11, 2020. Ben Blanchard/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

TAIPEI—Taiwan will not be intimidated by China’s “hooligan” officials and will continue to celebrate its national day around the world, the government said on Tuesday, after Taiwan said Chinese diplomats had tried to charge into a diplomatic event in Fiji.

Taiwan authorities said that a Taiwanese diplomat ended up in hospital after the altercation.

The Chinese regime, which views the democratically-run island as its own territory with no right to formal state-to-state ties, claimed that Taiwanese officials were the ones who attacked the Chinese officials.

The Pacific is a major source of competition between the two, where Taiwan has official diplomatic relations with four countries, though not Fiji.

Taiwan says the Chinese diplomats were trying to take pictures of a Taiwan national day event at a hotel to see who was there, and that in the altercation that followed, people from both sides were injured.

Speaking in Taipei, Taiwan Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Joanne Ou said Taiwan was a “peace-loving country” that invited people to events around the world for its Oct. 10 national day, which marks the founding of the Republic of China, Taiwan’s official name.

“Going forward, we will continue to hold national day receptions,” she said. “This will not change.”

Speaking in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian labeled Taiwan’s remarks as “rubbish” and “bogus accusations.”

Fiji’s foreign ministry has yet to comment on the incident.

Taiwan Premier Su Tseng-chang said the world needed to see what China was capable of, saying what they did was a “barbaric act.”

“China’s officials posted overseas are acting like hooligans; beating people is not acceptable. We sternly condemn this,” he told reporters.

The issue was hard to deal with because the Chinese diplomats there have diplomatic immunity, Su added.

“But we must appeal to the international community with the relevant evidence.”