News

Foreign Minister Joseph Wu Promotes Taiwan In India, Mentions Common Foe

On the afternoon of October 21st, Taiwan’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Joseph Wu was interviewed by Palki Sharma, host of the Radio Talk program on India’s WION television station.

Mr. Wu, the prominent face of Taiwan in overseas diplomatic circles said that the Chinese assault on a Taiwanese diplomat at a reception put on by Taiwan’s representative office in Fiji to mark Taiwan’s annual National Day festivities has disgusted people around Taiwan.

The attack also made headlines around the world, bringing to the fore China’s ongoing efforts to intimidate and the island nation.

C: MOFA – 圖一:「寰宇一家」(WION)電視台Gravitas節目主持人Palki_Sharma視訊專訪吳部長。

The Minister also called on the international community to appreciate Taiwan’s democratic values as a ‘front-line guardian’ (against China), and discussed related issues including China’s military threats and totalitarian expansion ambitions.

Mr. Wu went on to touch on Taiwan’s bilateral cooperation with India – an issue a day later making headlines based on claims that no FTA is in the offing between Taipei and New Delhi any time soon .

India’s own ongoing border disputes with China, and Beijing’s wider military expansion aspirations in east Asia, and the South China Sea, were also discussed.

On a more positive note Wu promoted Taiwan’s wishes to work with countries such as India to help best counter Chinese efforts to provoke, saying Taiwan will be careful to deal with the cross-strait situation as is, and to avoid having China use Taiwan as a “scapegoat” in the face of internal rule problems Beijing faces on the home front as a result of trade conflicts, virus outbreaks and natural disasters.

Specific to India he stressed that Taiwan’s south bound policy offers opportunities for improved Taiwan-India bilateral ties in fields as varied as the economy, trade cooperation, education, agriculture, science and technology, and health care – possibilities already bearing fruit following the signing of the Taiwan-India Bilateral Investment Agreement two years ago, most notably in the form of overall Taiwanese investments of over US$2.3 billion in the subcontinent, and the creation of around 65,000 jobs.

Mark Buckton

Mark is a journalism vet of 20 years with most of those years spent in Tokyo, Japan, as a columnist for The Japan Times and numerous other publications. His work has appeared on CNN, in the BBC, NPR, and in several dozen other media forms and publications across five continents.

Recent Posts

Five dead, over 200 injured in Christmas market attack in Germany’s Magdeburg

A tragic attack at a Christmas market in the eastern German city of Magdeburg left…

6 hours ago

Trump’s debt ceiling demand set aside as US Senate passes bill to avert Govt. shutdown

In a race against time, the Senate passed a crucial bipartisan funding bill early Saturday…

1 day ago

Russian President says he regrets not invading Ukraine earlier, in his year-end press conference

In his annual end-of-year press conference, Russian President Vladimir Putin reflected on Russia's ongoing war…

2 days ago

House rejects GOP proposal to avert weekend shutdown of US Federal Government

The federal government moved closer to a shutdown on Thursday after the House of Representatives…

2 days ago

Netanyahu announces Israeli troops will stay in Syria’s Demilitarized Buffer Zone

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared on Tuesday that Israeli forces will remain in the…

4 days ago

Chief of Russia’s nuclear protection forces killed in Moscow bombing

A high-ranking Russian military officer, Lieutenant General Igor Kirillov, was killed in a targeted bombing…

5 days ago